There are stars all around us, so of course you'll see stars next to any planet you choose.
You can see five of the planets in our Solar System with the naked eye - they appear as bright stars. To see Uranus and Neptune, you need telescopes.
There are shooting stars, but at one minute you look for one, and next you don't then it goes past you that fast you can't see it but some people can.
Yes, you can see Uranus through a telescope. In fact, if your eyes are really good and you're in a really dark sky area, you might just be able to see Uranus with the naked eye - but you wouldn't be able to distinguish it from the background stars, most of which would appear brighter than Uranus.
2011.........sucks right
See in uranus
well just go on google and type in uranus and then click on uranus there you see uranus.
Uranus is in our galaxy, the Milky Way. Everything you can see in the sky at night without a telescope, all the planets and stars are all in our galaxy.
Our Sun is just an average star. There are smaller stars, and bigger stars, Some stars are so huge it would be difficult to see the Sun next to it - See link for a picture.
Both - Uranus has rings - and 27 moons ! See the related link to Wikipedia for a nice article on the planet's features.
Ariel is the moon of a superior planet (Uranus), so it's never between the Earth and the Sun. If we see it at all, we see it as a full moon.
i think if we go to the uranus we can see all other planet, which are around the uranus. we can also see galaxies, nebula, black hole, telescope and some rocks which are flying all around the planets.
The planet Mars is gravitationally bound to the Sun. The Sun is the primary celestial body in our solar system. All the planets in the solar system (Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune) revolve around the Sun.