no
No.
No.
No satellite did. Pluto was discovered by Clyde Tombaugh, who found it using a ground-based telescope in 1930, long before we launched the first satellites.
the optical telescope has discovered objects on earth and in space
Galileo wasn't the first to make a telescope but he discovered the telescope at the age of 46.
Yes, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn had been discovered several millennia before the invention of the telescope.
amerigo as prevent the first telescope.
Many of the larger craters on the moon can be seen from earth without a telescope, so nobody discovered craters on the moon with a telescope.
Europa was discovered in 1610 by Galileo when he pointed a telescope at Jupiter.
Uranus, which was discovered by Sir William HerschelPrior to the invention of the telescope, the only known planets were Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn.Uranus was the first planet discovered by telescope.
There is no single planet named Kepler, rather it is part of the designation given to planets discovered using the Kepler telescope. Most of the planets discovered using the telescope are larger than Earth, but some are smaller.
Mars can be seen from the Earth without a telescope, people have known about its existence since the stone age.