Well, honey, unless you have superhuman vision or a spaceship, you won't be seeing Uranus with those naked eyes of yours. It's too far and too faded for us mere mortals to see without a telescope. Stick to gazing at the stars, darling.
no we can not see them they are micro organism
yes it can
uranus, though it can be barely seen from the naked eye.Neptune is too dim to see with the naked eye, but people with good eyes who know where to look can spot Uranus on a clear dark night (at its brightest it has an apparent magnitude of around 5.5).Saturn.Uranus should be visible for those with exceptional eyesight in areas with exceptionally dark skies as its maximum apparent magnitude is 5.32 and the faintest objects are those with apparent brightness around 7. Neptune never geta brighter than 7.78.
Mercury, Neptune, and Pluto are not visible to the naked eye due to their distance from Earth or brightness levels. Uranus can sometimes be visible to the naked eye under very dark skies, but it is challenging to see without a telescope.
Well, friend, Uranus is indeed visible to the naked eye, but only under the right conditions. It is best viewed when the sky is dark and clear, away from city lights and light pollution. So grab a blanket, head outside on a lovely evening, and take a sweet, kind look up at the twinkling stars in the sky - you may just catch twinkling Uranus among them.
Yes, you can see Uranus through a telescope. In fact, if your eyes are really good and you're in a really dark sky area, you might just be able to see Uranus with the naked eye - but you wouldn't be able to distinguish it from the background stars, most of which would appear brighter than Uranus.
Neptune is the only planet not visible with the naked eye, though Uranus is extremely dim and hard to spot.
no they are not
no not with the naked eye
no we can not see them they are micro organism
Naked eye but for better veiwing you could use a telescope.
Not with the naked eye, but with a microscope.
yes it can
Do pilots look through the windshield with their naked eyes, yes.
Answer Your brain can't see heat, ultraviolet light, radiowaves, X-Rays, etc. with your naked eyes, because these different kinds of light's wavelengths are either too long or too short for your naked eyes to see. So that is why you can't see infrared
uranus, though it can be barely seen from the naked eye.Neptune is too dim to see with the naked eye, but people with good eyes who know where to look can spot Uranus on a clear dark night (at its brightest it has an apparent magnitude of around 5.5).Saturn.Uranus should be visible for those with exceptional eyesight in areas with exceptionally dark skies as its maximum apparent magnitude is 5.32 and the faintest objects are those with apparent brightness around 7. Neptune never geta brighter than 7.78.
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