Oh, what a delightful question! When you look up at the night sky, especially in a dark location away from city lights, you can see up to about 2,500 individual stars that make up the Milky Way galaxy. Isn't it marvelous to think we are all part of this vast and beautiful universe?
With some luck, good eyesight, and a very dark sky, there are one or two nearby galaxies that can be seen by the naked eye as small splotches.
No you would see an entirely different vista. Most of the stars you can see from earth would not be visible to the naked eye from the galactic core, and they would also be lost in a blaze of glory of the core suns. From within a planetary atmosphere you probably would not be able to see stars even at night, due to the ambient light. The core suns are packed about a quarter of a light year apart.
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.
Aside from the sun and moon, the fiver inner planets (other than the earth) are visible to the naked eye. Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn can all be seen at times without the aid of any optics.
The faintest star visible to the naked eye typically has an apparent magnitude of around 6. This is near the limit of human eye sensitivity under optimal viewing conditions.
With the naked eye, you can see some galaxies, like the two Magellanic Clouds, and the Andromeda Galaxy. The farthest objects visible in large telescopes would also be entire galaxies.With the naked eye, you can see some galaxies, like the two Magellanic Clouds, and the Andromeda Galaxy. The farthest objects visible in large telescopes would also be entire galaxies.With the naked eye, you can see some galaxies, like the two Magellanic Clouds, and the Andromeda Galaxy. The farthest objects visible in large telescopes would also be entire galaxies.With the naked eye, you can see some galaxies, like the two Magellanic Clouds, and the Andromeda Galaxy. The farthest objects visible in large telescopes would also be entire galaxies.
Around 2500-5000 visible stars with the naked eye.
No, the human egg is not visible to the naked eye as it is microscopic in size.
No, human eggs are not visible to the naked eye as they are microscopic in size.
There is only one asteroid currently visible to the naked eye. It is the Vesta asteroid.
No. But yes. Yeast is a microbe but it is visible with the naked eye
No, the human egg cell is not visible to the naked eye as it is microscopic in size.
The term for visible with the unaided (naked) eye is "gross", as in gross anatomy.
Visible with the naked eye - about 8 to 9 depending on viewing conditions. (Not all from the same viewing spot) With estimation, anywhere between 100 and 300 billion, at distances up to 13 billion light years.
Of the naked eye galaxies - i.e. those visible with the naked eye. There are seven. * Milky Way - Ours * Andromeda * Large Magellanic Cloud - Southern Hemisphere * Small Magellanic Cloud - Southern Hemisphere * Omega Centauri - Cannibalised by the Milky Way * Triangulum Galaxy - Very Faint * Bode's Galaxy - Very Faint See link for more details
With some luck, good eyesight, and a very dark sky, there are one or two nearby galaxies that can be seen by the naked eye as small splotches.
No, they are much too small.