There are two "dwarf galaxies" near the Milky Way, called the Large Magellanic Cloud and the (wait for it..... ) SMALL Magellanic Cloud. Guess who discovered them?
Ferdinand Magellan (more likely, his navigator....) while he was on his history-making round-the-world voyage.
So WHO can see them? People in the Southern Hemisphere; they are not visible from Europe. Or, unfortunately for me, from California. :-(
Yes, the Earth is in the Milky Way. Every star you can see in the sky at night is also in the Milky Way. With the naked eye, you cannot see any stars that are not in the Milky Way. The next nearest galaxy is Andromeda and it is just about visible with the naked eye, looking like a hazy dust in the sky, but you would not see any stars in it. It is the furthest thing away that we can see with the naked eye. It is hard to be accurate but it is about 2,500,000 light years away. That is about 14,674,284,000,000,000,000 miles away. To see stars in it, you'd need a very powerful telescope.
No. Approximately 6000 stars can be seen with the naked eye, but there are many trillions of star out there that we can NOT see with the naked eye. Even the closest star after the Sun - Proxima Centauri - can't be seen without telescopes.
You can't see it with the "naked eye", but binoculars or a small telescope should show it. In fact it is a very bright star, but it's quite along way from Earth. Also it's a variable star, so its brightness varies.
yes they were naked pics
In complete darkness wherein a human would see absolutely nothing, (as in without any light including without the light of moon and stars), a lion can see 60 meters ahead. In daylight, of course much, much further. A lion's eye vision is six times better than humans, therefore it must see objects six times further than a naked human eye.
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.
The three galaxies (other than our galaxie) that the naked eye can see is The Andromeda Galaxie, The Large Magellanic Cloud, and The Magellanic Cloud.
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.
From Earth, it is possible to see three galaxies with the naked eye: the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), the Large Magellanic Cloud, and the Small Magellanic Cloud.
Yes. You need a telescope to see most galaxies. However, aside from parts of our own galaxy, there are at least three others that can be seen with the naked eye. In the northern hemisphere, the Andromeda galaxy, a spiral galaxy like our own "Milky Way" galaxy, is visible with the naked eye at times. In the southern hemisphere, you can see the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds, two irregular galaxies.
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
Any normal star bright enough to be seen with the naked eye as an individual star is in the Milky Way galaxy. A supernova in a nearby galaxy such as one of the Magellanic Clouds might be bright enough to be seen with the naked eye, but these are short-lived.
No, gas is typically invisible to the naked eye.
When you look at your blood with the naked eye all you see is red liquid. This is all anyone sees with the naked eye.
The term "naked eye" means that there is nothing helping the eye to see. for example, if you are using glassess or a telescpoe, then you are not using the naked eye.
You have a 3rd eye
Something that is so small that you cannot see it with the naked eye but must use a microscope to observe it