From 3000 light years away, with a big enough telescope, you would be able to see the Sun. As a very dim star.
optical telescopes - high mountain far from city light pollutionradio telescope - anyplace with little radio interference in the bands it operates inx-ray or gamma ray telescope - in orbitneutrino telescope - deep in an abandoned salt mine.etc.
The planet that appears blue-green through a telescope is Uranus. Its color comes from the presence of methane gas in its atmosphere, which absorbs red light and reflects blue and green light.
You can see Venus or other planets through a telescope from anywhere on Earth. The visibility of the planets depends on their current position in relation to Earth and the time of year. It is best to observe them from locations with minimal light pollution for optimal viewing.
the moon is not a planet. The moon is a natural satelite that orbits the earth. It has no light but it will emit the sun's light at night.
Venus is about 2.32 light minutes from Earth, Jupiter is about 35 light minutes from Earth.
a telescope
The planet that appears blue-green when viewed through a telescope is Uranus. This color is due to the presence of methane in its atmosphere, which absorbs red light and reflects blue and green light.
Mercury is the most unlikely to be viewed because of its proximity to the sun, but it can be viewed with special equipment, like a light filter. All outer planets can be viewed with a telescope depending on the planets position relative to Earth.
you can see planets but using telescope or the kepler mission or satellites, though if you are using a telescope, what you see is not how the planet is right now because of the speed of light. Even when you look in the mirror, you are seeing yourself, but in fact you are look at yourself which is a billionth of a second ago. Also the sun light, it takes 8 minutes for the sun light to hit the Earth.
Putting the telescope in space means that it is above the earth's atmosphere, cloud layer and free of earth's light pollution.
The planet you are referring to is likely Kepler-452b, which is located about 1,400 light-years away from Earth. It was discovered by NASA's Kepler Space Telescope and is considered a "cousin" to Earth due to its potential habitability.
optical telescopes - high mountain far from city light pollutionradio telescope - anyplace with little radio interference in the bands it operates inx-ray or gamma ray telescope - in orbitneutrino telescope - deep in an abandoned salt mine.etc.
The planet that appears blue-green through a telescope is Uranus. Its color comes from the presence of methane gas in its atmosphere, which absorbs red light and reflects blue and green light.
Venus is the planet that emmits the most light to earth.
The main advantage would be the absence of an atmosphere. Any telescope on earth can only "see" electromagnetic (light) waves after they have travelled through the atmosphere, losing some of their directional integrity, which distorts the image seen in earth bound telescopes. Some light waves never make it to the telescope at all.
Yes it is.Uranus can be seen without a telescope but it will be very faint and you have to have near perfect conditions and no light pollution.
Light from stars arrives at a telescope as parallel rays because stars are very far away compared to the size of a telescope's aperture. This distance makes the light rays effectively parallel when they reach the telescope, similar to how sunlight reaches Earth as parallel rays.