In the year 2061 it is scheduled to pass by earth.
Florida
Well, as the name implies, visible areas of the crust are areas that you can see. These are areas that are either very new, resulting from recent vulcanism; or areas which have been exposed by weathering and erosion. Non-visible parts of the crust are just that - not visible to the eye. This is either because they have formed recently, but many miles underground; or they are just too old to have been efficiently exposed by weathering and erosion.
If your lucky. Yes you can see them but it would be pretty hard to see. because of all the gasses and because of how far away you are and its hard anyways to see curtain things with the naked eye. xoxo, Jenna
All of them in the solar system and others around other stars.
The first artificial satellite to successfully achieve Earth orbit was Sputnik-I, launched from the USSR in early October of 1957. It was visible from Earth with the naked eye, if you knew where and when to look for it. The world was buzzing with the news, and local newspapers published the time and direction to see it. About two weeks after the launch, I got up at 4:00 in the morning, rode my bicycle down to the big open field adjacent to the local Triple-A team's ballpark, swung my eyes around to the designated place at the designated time, and was treated to a free show by Sputnik-I that must have lasted at least three minutes. It was my 17th birthday.
how have they observed halleys comet since 1682vfggbnhfgnf
The next comet will be Comet Ison which will pass by the earth in 2013. It will be visible with lenses during late summer and will be visible to the naked eye by approximately November.
HayleysComet will come about 2061!!!!!!!!!!!! It last came in 1986.
Probably for a long long time, as Inky has yet to be named as a comet, but if you're lucky and spot a new comet, you are at liberty to name it Inky if you like.
No. But yes. Yeast is a microbe but it is visible with the naked eye
The name of the comet seen in 1986 is Halley's Comet. You can see it every 75-76 years, and is the only short period comet that is clearly visible to the naked eye from earth, and thus the only naked-eye comet that might appear twice in a human lifetime.
To VERY powerful telescopes, yes. It won't be back in the inner system and visible to the naked eye again until around 2061.
There is only one asteroid currently visible to the naked eye. It is the Vesta asteroid.
As objects visible to astronomers with telescopes, it is a rare time when some comet is not visible in the sky, at some place in the world. But as far as large, naked-eye comets, the last one was Comet Hale-Bopp, which reached maximum brightness in April of 1997. It will not return for about 2500 years. New comets are being discovered all the time, but there is no way to predict when or if a large, naked-eye comet will be seen again. We are reasonably sure of the return of Comet Halley, but that will next be in 2061.
it is a comet that can been seen with a (naked eye) meaning without a telescope.
That refers to a comet that cannot be seen with the naked eye; only with a telescope.
no