no
No. Binoculars, having relatively small lenses, do not gather enough light for you to see something as faint as Pluto. However, you can see Pluto with a large amateur telescope.
Yes, see link.
See the link below.
uranus is bigger than Pluto. Pluto is like a little marble compared to uranus.
Hubble used, among others, the 100-inch Hooker telescope at Mount Wilson, which could have easily resolved Pluto. The Yerkes observatory managed to (unknowingly) photograph Pluto with only a 40-inch scope, which has about six times less light-gathering ability.
Visions - 1976 All I Could See from Where I Stood 2-8 was released on: USA: 10 November 1977
usually the highestmountain in the world
see 'why was Pluto removed from the planetary system? '
No. Binoculars, having relatively small lenses, do not gather enough light for you to see something as faint as Pluto. However, you can see Pluto with a large amateur telescope.
If you were born on Pluto you would die before you turned 1 year. One year there assuming you could survive is 248 years here, so multiply to see.
Pluto is a dwarf planet, not a star. See related questions,
Pluto can be really cold, because it was really far away from the sun! It can be about -256 Celsius and more! But the sun is big, so you could still see it, but its so small when looking at it.
The name of the curve is the "meniscus".
A blind curve is a dangerous curve on a roadway in which drivers cannot see approaching traffic.
by telloscope
no
no way. because universe is so huge it has no end at all