Want this question answered?
you have just been trolled
You don't need ANY kind of telescope to see the solar eclipse. If you have a telescope, and _IF_ you have a projection eyepiece that will project the Sun's image onto the screen, then you can use it - but the problem with viewing the Sun is more in decreasing the intensity of the image rather than magnifying it.
cloud tops The four largest planets in our solar system are gas giants. They have no solid surface.
I don't think so. We learned a lot about our Solar System with Voyager, Pioneer, and similar projects.
You would see something called an 'annular eclipse' - like the image in the bottom-right of the picture in the related link.
spectrometer
Daniel Geery has written: 'Wasatch Trails' 'Solar greenhouses, underground' -- subject(s): Design and construction, Greenhouse gardening, Organic gardening, Underground Solar greenhouses
A solar shadow tool can be an instrument used by installers of solar energy systems to make sure they align the collectors properly.
SDIMM Solar Differential Image Motion Monitor.
an instrument used to measure the flux of solar radiation through a surface.
Today we had to turn our projects in about the 3d solar system.
telescope
The instrument that converts light into electricity is called a Photovoltiac. I hope this answers your question.
the radio telescope
Use a pinhole or a dark-filtered optical device to project the sun's image on a light surface,and view the image.
you have just been trolled
the radio telescope