Saturn is only visible to the naked eye when it is dark.
Galileo discovered Saturn in 1610 through his telescope. He observed its unique shape and rings but was unable to identify them accurately at the time.
The best time to look for Saturn is when it is at opposition, which occurs when Earth is directly between Saturn and the Sun. This usually happens once a year and is when Saturn is at its closest point to Earth, making it brighter and easier to see in the night sky.
Galileo Galilei discovered the rings of Saturn in 1610 as part of his observation of celestial objects through a telescope. However, he was not able to identify the rings as Saturn's due to the limitations of his telescope at the time.
New York is on Eastern Time so noon EDT (Eastern Daylight Time) is and will be noon.
Midnight >>>> Midday >>>>> Midnight 12 midnight > 12 noon >>> 12 midnight 12:00 noon
Saturn is plainly visible to the naked eye. Anyone who looks up at the night sky at the right time can see it. So there is no definite discovery date.
in 1987
eve
Morning
Galileo Galilei did not discover Saturn. Saturn is easily visible, using naked human eyes, at some time of every clear night during most of the year. It was well known to ancient, and probably to prehistoric, people.
No such time as '12 am'. It is '12 noon' (midday) or 12 midnight. 'am/pm' are the Latin initials for 'ante/post merdian' , which means 'before/after noon'. So if it is '12 noon', how can it be 'am/before noon'. It is NOON. '12 am' or '12 pm' is a confusing nonsense.
Galileo discovered Saturn in 1610 through his telescope. He observed its unique shape and rings but was unable to identify them accurately at the time.
Midnight... 12:00 Am Noon... 12:00 Pm
AM is the time period going from midnight to noon, so there is both night and day during AM hours.
it has to be night time and u dont need a telscope
The best time to look for Saturn is when it is at opposition, which occurs when Earth is directly between Saturn and the Sun. This usually happens once a year and is when Saturn is at its closest point to Earth, making it brighter and easier to see in the night sky.
Time is divided into: 24 hours equalling a day and a night. (midnight to noon = 12 hours, noon to midnight = 12 hours). There are 60 minutes in 1 hour. There are 60 seconds in 1 minute.