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.
he does not see the moon do anything he's watching a solar eclipse and possibly going blind
In the centre of the shadow cast by the Moon on the Earth
No. The next solar eclipse will be a partial solar eclipse on June 1, 2011.
Solar eclipse
you spelt it correctly already Solar Eclipse
he does not see the moon do anything he's watching a solar eclipse and possibly going blind
Yes, both. In the case of solar eclipses, care must be taken, not to look directly at the Sun - and especially not through a telescope! If you have a telescope, you can project the Sun's image onto a piece of paper, and watch it there.
In the centre of the shadow cast by the Moon on the Earth
As with everything, use the proper equipment for maximum safety. If viewing via a telescope, project the image onto a sheet of paper. Do NOT look directly at the eclipse, even at totality.To protect your eyes you can use a welding glass, a telescope with full aperture solar filter or the same with binoculars you can also use mylar solar film.
looking threw telescope or binoculars and spot the moon, put your camera in front of it and take pictures.
eclipse is of two kinds- solar eclipse and lunar eclipse
A solar eclipse.
You should definitely NOT look at the Sun directly, since that may damage your eyes. The Sun is very bright; even during a solar eclipse it's bright enough to damage your eyes. Looking directly through a telescope would be even worse. If you want to watch the solar eclipse, you can project the image from a telescope onto a white sheet of paper, and watch that one.
the two kind of eclipse are solar eclipse and lonar eclipse..lonar and solar
the two kind of eclipse are solar eclipse and lonar eclipse..lonar and solar
The glare of the sun's photosphere. To see the corona with your eyes, wait for a total solar eclipse, or use a specialise telescope.
The corona of the Sun can only be seen with the naked eye during a total solar eclipse. However, with a special telescope called a coronagraph, you can view the solar corona at any time.During a solar eclipse, you can see the corona as a bright ring. But compared to the brilliance of the Sun itself, the corona is invisibly dim. That's why you can only see it when the Sun itself is hidden behind the Moon.