The type of telescope determines how far it can see into the sky. It becomes a question of details. A naked eye can see a lightyear away but not details. A standard telescope can see to the 10th magnitude while the eye can see to the 6th.
A telescope lets you see things far away and a microscope lets you see see things that are really small
No, Neptune cannot be seen without a telescope. It is too dim and far away for the naked eye to detect, with a magnitude of about 7. It requires at least a small telescope or a strong pair of binoculars to observe it, along with knowledge of its location in the night sky.
You can see Venus in the evening sky just after sunset and Saturn in the early morning sky just before sunrise. The visibility of planets depends on their position relative to the Sun, so the best times to see them without a telescope change throughout the year.
The Greek word "teleskopos".
This distance is more than 600 miles -- too far for a land-based telescope to be useful.
Any kind of telescope will help
That would be possible, yes.
its the telescope with suitable configuration of power.
"On a clear day, you can see forever."
Binoculars, telescope.
A telescope lets you see things far away and a microscope lets you see see things that are really small
Copernicus did not use a telescope in his astronomical work.
No, Neptune cannot be seen without a telescope. It is too dim and far away for the naked eye to detect, with a magnitude of about 7. It requires at least a small telescope or a strong pair of binoculars to observe it, along with knowledge of its location in the night sky.
A telescope enables the user to see far more into the distance than with normal eyesight.
Yes
see far
telescope