Mars' color is red. Its surface is oxidized just like rust.
Mars is both red when you look at it through a telescope and to the naked eye.
Venus is easily visible to the naked eye. People were looking at it for millennia before the telescope was invented. Galileo was the first person to look at Venus through a telescope.
I don't know, but you shouldn't be looking at naked women.
At least 3 or 4 galaxies can be seen with the naked eye. Other galaxies can be seen if you watch through a telescope. Basically, in any direction you look, there are galaxies.
One that you look through, rather than into.
You could see Neptune from Earth with a telescope if you knew exactly where to look.
First off, your question is contradictory. You cannot look at any object with a telescope and with your naked eye at the same time. Naked eye means that you are looking at the object without any visual aid. The Hubble Telescope is never pointed at Earth. The Earth is too bright from that height and that high intensity could damage the Telescope's cameras. For pictures of the Earth from space, you can look up some images from the ISS or the Space Shuttle.
Telescope eyepieces are important of any visual telescope. It is the main part of the telescope and is what determines how the object will look like through the telescope.
You find the telescope on the Beacon. You look through it if Rockhopper is coming... or leaving...
the lense of a telescope is round which makes things seem closer
A star might look blurry through a telescope due to atmospheric turbulence causing the light from the star to be distorted as it passes through Earth's atmosphere. This turbulence can create fluctuations in the air that affect the clarity of the image seen through the telescope.
It would blind you to look at it.