uranus
Earth. Next easiest is probably Venus, when it's up.
The Earth is definitely the #1 easiest. Next in line would be Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, and Mercury. Each of those is visible without a telescope, so you'd know exactly where to point your telescope by seeing the planet with your eye first. The brightest planet that you do need a telescope to see is Uranus. So you definitely won't miss it when you're pointed at it, but you need to know where to point.
A massive storm
The Earth is definitely the #1 easiest. Next in line would be Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn. Each of those is visible without a telescope, so you'd know exactly where to point your telescope by seeing the planet with your eye first. The brightest planet that you do need a telescope to see is Uranus. So you definitely won't miss it when you're pointed at it, but you need to know where to point.
That is the planet Jupiter. The black spot was created recently when a asteroid collided with it. Jupiter has a Great Red Spot created through storms. No planet has a black spot no mars has a giant red spot and mercury has the black spot
The Earth is definitely the #1 easiest. Next in line would be Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, and Mercury. Each of those is visible without a telescope, so you'd know exactly where to point your telescope by seeing the planet with your eye first. The brightest planet that you do need a telescope to see is Uranus. So you definitely won't miss it when you're pointed at it, but you need to know where to point.
It was only during spacecraft missions to Jupiter that crescent views of the planet were obtained. A small telescope will usually show Jupiter's four Galilean moons and the prominent cloud belts across Jupiter's atmosphere. A large telescope will show Jupiter's Great Red Spot when it faces the Earth.
The dark spot mentioned likely refers to a storm on Neptune known as the Great Dark Spot. This storm was observed by the Hubble Space Telescope in 1989 but had disappeared by 1995 when the Voyager 2 spacecraft revisited Neptune. The reasons for its disappearance are still not fully understood.
The planet with a great dark spot that eventually disappeared was Neptune. This large dark spot was first observed in 1989 by the Voyager 2 spacecraft but had disappeared by the time Hubble Space Telescope observed Neptune in 1994. The exact cause of its disappearance is still not fully understood.
Yes, a dark spot has been observed on Uranus. It was first observed in 2006 by both the Hubble Telescope and the Keck Telescope.
Humans have been making the distinction between stars and planets since prehistoric times, making it impossible for us to know which ones were first identified. For what it's worth, though, Venus ("the morning star") might be considered the most conspicuous planet, and both Jupiter and Mars are often easier to spot than Mercury.
Actually the Great Red Spot is on a planet not a planet its self . It is on the planet Jupiter.