Because your eyes' lens focuses the sunlight on your retina, which can do some damage the same way when you focus sunlight on a piece of paper using a lens... After the while, it starts to burn
planet farthest from the sun
Probably Mercury, since you would have to be looking in the direction of the Sun, the overwhelming glare of which makes it almost impossible to see anything else in that direction. Or, it could be Neptune. You can't see Neptune without a telescope.
Probably Mercury, since you would have to be looking in the direction of the Sun, the overwhelming glare of which makes it almost impossible to see anything else in that direction. Or, it could be Neptune. You can't see Neptune without a telescope.
As intensity of sun light rays are greater so,when we see sun with our naked eyes the sun rays falls on eye lens which is convex which diverges the rays and make it difficult to see
Because Mercury or Venus is in other side of the sun , or just simply when you are looking at the sun, without any filters, you burn your eyes.
Because the Sun's photosphere is so much brighter in visible light (most of the light the Sun's corona emits is ultraviolet). It is necessary to block the light from the Sun's photosphere to see the Sun's corona.
Right in front of the Sun. The brightness of the Sun makes it difficult to see the Moon.
Photosphere is what we see most of the time, but you can also see the Chromosphere during a solar eclipse.
Our Sun is just an average star. There are smaller stars, and bigger stars, Some stars are so huge it would be difficult to see the Sun next to it - See link for a picture.
It's difficult to know why you're asking this. The Sun produces nearly all the light we see in the daytime, and not at night.
It's difficult to know why you're asking this. The Sun produces nearly all the light we see in the daytime, and not at night.
It work by looking in a distant look though the glass you can see the sun from where you are at.