You can see the comet Lulin during Feb. 24-25th by finding the Leo constellation.
Cause the Saturn can be just below the constellation and the brightest star in the constellation Leo regulus. Use this 2 things as a guide to finding the comet Lulin.
On the 24-25th of Feb. the comet will be just 2 degrees below Saturn, and on the 26-27th of the month it will be below regulus. HOPE THIS HELPS
There are comets all the time, sometimes we can see them with the naked eye.
At least with the naked eye, yes. Comets can become visible around the time they pass the orbit of Mars, though on its own a comet-sized object would not be visible to the naked eye anyway. However, it is possible to spot such objects with advanced telescopes.
That will depend on when you make the trip. There are MANY comets detected each year, although only a few become bright enough to be seen with the naked eye, and very few are bright enough to be seen with the naked eye from bright city lights. We typically detect comets when they are about a year out from the Sun, although a flurry of smaller "Sun-diving" comets were detected only hours before they fell into the Sun in December, 2010.
When you look at your blood with the naked eye all you see is red liquid. This is all anyone sees with the naked eye.
The term "naked eye" means that there is nothing helping the eye to see. for example, if you are using glassess or a telescpoe, then you are not using the naked eye.
You have a 3rd eye
Something that is so small that you cannot see it with the naked eye but must use a microscope to observe it
No. You can see leeches with the naked eye. Anything you can see with the naked eye is multicellular.
Certainly. Mars is often highly visible with the naked eye.
Around 2500-5000 visible stars with the naked eye.
Because, it is too small to see with the naked eye.
no.