The new moon is not generally visible at all. The Moon is "new" when it is quite close to the Sun in the sky, and the entire lighted half of the Moon is facing away from the Earth, toward the Sun.
A day before the new moon, the waning crescent is generally visible low in the eastern sky at dawn, while the day after the new, the waxing crescent is seen low in the western sky at sunset.
I would not recommend the attempt. The new Moon is very close to the Sun in the sky; you could easily blind yourself by inadvertently pointing the telescope at the Sun instead of at the Moon.
However, precise use of a solar coronagraph CAN display the "new" moon against the background glare of the Sun.
-- From where we sit, the moon appears to revolve around us every 27.3 days.
-- One result is that in that space of time, looking toward the moon means
looking toward all of the stars and other things that are anywhere near its
path.
-- The sun, the moon, and the planets all happen to stay on or close to the
same path through the stars.
-- So no blanket answer to this question is possible, because the situation
changes so fast. Sooner or later, every planet in our solar system will appear
near the moon.
Generally, no. The new moon happens when the Moon is almost between the Sun and the Earth; there is no sunlight striking the visible side of the Moon, and between that and the Sun's glare, it's nearly impossible to see.
Through a sufficiently powerful telescope, nearly all moons can be seen through a telescope.
A new moon is when we see only the side of the moon that has a shadow. This does not affect the stars.
The New Moon occurs once every 29.53 days. It rises at roughly the same time as the sunrise.
Only at night. Or in a deep cave or well, where you can look straight up into the sky.
When the Moon is New, the Moon is hiding very close to the Sun in the sky. You might be able to see it, if you blocked the Sun and knew just where to look, but you have to be careful.
During the day. The "new" moon rises about when the Sun does, and sets when the Sun does.
As Seen Through a Telescope was created in 1900.
yes
The four moons were discovered sometime between 1609 and 1610 when Galileo made improvements to his telescope, which enabled him to observe celestial bodies more distinctly than had ever been possible before. As a result of improvements Galileo Galilei made to the telescope, with a magnifying capability of 20×, he was able to see celestial bodies more distinctly than was ever possible before. This allowed Galilei to discover sometime between December 1609 and January 1610 what came to be known as the Galilean moons. :)
Galileo Gailei is the first person credited with using the telescope for astronomical observations. He did not invent the telescope. He is the first to have seen moons going around Jupiter, the rings of Saturn (though he incorrectly identified them), and that the Moon had cliffs and craters.
If your were on another planet or the moon yes. If you are on earth you cannot observe it (in its entirity) through a telescope unless you are placed off of the planet.
As Seen Through a Telescope was created in 1900.
It was the first thing to be seen because that's how it was.
because there are a lot of moons that surround Jupiter and they rotate around Jupiter at different paces not all can be seen at the same time
Yes, all four of Jupiter's large moons can be seen with binoculars.
Pluto has only been seen from Earth of the Hubble telescope. The best image conjured is a blurred image of Pluto and its three moons. But as of right now, New Horizons has an unmanned space probe on route to Pluto. They say that they will get detailed pictures and maps of all of Pluto and its moons. Pluto has only been seen from Earth of the Hubble telescope. The best image conjured is a blurred image of Pluto and its three moons. But as of right now, New Horizons has an unmanned space probe on route to Pluto. They say that they will get detailed pictures and maps of all of Pluto and its moons, hopefully by 2015
You have to do this. You have the chart and you need to answer the prompt concerning the chart. We don't do homework for students.
Yes.
Jupiter.
Pluto can be seen with an amateur telescope but it is not easy and you will require a great deal of supporting information on how to locate it. Something like the Hubble Space Telescope would be required to see Pluto's moons, and then, not in any great detail.
They're fairly big for moons, although Jupiter itself is big. The four "Galilean" moons of Jupiter were the first "moons" other than our own Moon to be seen, by Galileo using his new telescope.
it appears to be teal and blue green.I have seen it in a telescope myself
Yes it can I believe it can be seen with your eyes. It can be seen in colour through a telescope.