It is impossible to say for sure. Some stars may be very bright, but are much too far away for us to see. All the stars you see when you look outside at night are just from our galaxy. We can only see a few thousand of them, and there are many more than that in our galaxy. There are about 100 billion galaxies out there. Even among the stars we can see, some may be very bright if you were closer to them, but they seem very dim to us. The sun is a star and it seems bright because we are so close to it. There are many stars out there that are a lot brighter than it is, but just seem like tiny points of light to us. So your question cannot really be answered.
Wiki User
∙ 14y agoWiki User
∙ 13y agoSirius, Canopus, Rigil Kentaurus, Arcturus, and Vega.
Wiki User
∙ 13y agoI don't think you can see 10 galaxies with the naked eye. I am aware of 3: M31 (the Andromeda Galaxy); the Large Magellanic Cloud; and the Small Magellanic Cloud.
In the case quoted, 10 is the magnification factor of the binoculars. In other words, objects appear to be 10 times closer viewed through the binoculars compared to with the naked eye.
No. Vaccinia is "large" ... for a virus, which still means "tiny" compared to any ordinary human scale. The smallest things visible to the naked eye are on the order of 10-4 m; vaccinia is well under 10-6 m ... over a hundred times too small to see. It's just barely larger than the smallest thing visible with an optical microscope
Naked Science - 2004 Iceland Volcano Eruption 7-10 is rated/received certificates of: USA:TV-PG
DONT EVEN TRY,NOT UNLESS YOU HAVE A WELDING LENS SHADE 10 OR HIGHER OVER THE END,EVEN THEN i WOULDNT TRY IT!!
Galaxies are held together by gravity. So are Solar Systems. In the case of galaxies, and galaxy clusters, it isn't entirely clear what type of masses provide this gravity - the amount of known matter is simply too small, by a factor of 5-10. For more information, do some reading on "dark matter".
With the naked eye, you can see stars up to about 1000 light years away. You can also see the Andromeda Galaxy. That's about 2.5 million light years away. That's the most distant object visible to the naked eye. Binoculars show it easily. With a 3" refracting telescope can see stars down to at least magnitude 9, plus some galaxies beyond Andromeda. The biggest telescopes can see to over 10 billion light years.
Stardust Galaxies was created on 2009-10-30.
In the case quoted, 10 is the magnification factor of the binoculars. In other words, objects appear to be 10 times closer viewed through the binoculars compared to with the naked eye.
The Naked Now was created on 1987-10-05.
The Naked Kiss was created on 1964-10-29.
Naked Alibi was created on 1954-10-01.
The Naked God was created on 1999-10-08.
X-tra Naked was created in 1992-10.
Mars is visible to the naked eye nearly every night. It will be in the constellation Virgo. Mars will be quite distant and rather dim in late August, appearing less than half its average size. It will have about 1/10 of the brightness of last January because of its extreme distance this late summer and fall.
I think about 10 billion
No. Vaccinia is "large" ... for a virus, which still means "tiny" compared to any ordinary human scale. The smallest things visible to the naked eye are on the order of 10-4 m; vaccinia is well under 10-6 m ... over a hundred times too small to see. It's just barely larger than the smallest thing visible with an optical microscope
Miss Naked Beauty was created on 2008-10-21.