The Chandra telescope was built to observe X-rays.
You can see Saturn with any kind of telescope. In fact, you can see it without a telescope. For professionals and serious amateurs, the type of telescope used depends on what specific property or characteristic of Saturn they're interested in.
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.
Most optical magnifying units use compound lenses. Lenses that are made to focus light onto a spot or spread it out. A combination of them makes the best optics. Lenses are ground as convex and concave.
With a telescope, yes. You can't see it without a telescope though.
If you had a telescope on a planet 3000 light years away and zoomed in on Earth, you would see the Earth as it was 3000 years ago. Due to the time it takes for light to travel, you would not be seeing Earth in real-time, but rather how it appeared 3000 years in the past.
NuSTAR (the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array)is a space-based X-ray telescope.
A compound microscope
You can see Saturn with any kind of telescope. In fact, you can see it without a telescope. For professionals and serious amateurs, the type of telescope used depends on what specific property or characteristic of Saturn they're interested in.
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.
It mainly depends on the telescope please be more specific if you want a more specific answer.
A refracting telescope is a type of telescope that has a large thin lense at the front and a smaller thicker lense at the end where the eyepiece is. Refracting telescopes use lenses unlike reflecting telescopes that use mirrors to reflect the light. This is a good image of a refracting and reflecting telescope: [See related link]
Yes a telescope collects electromagnetic radiation (light) an then brings this light to a focus so that the source of the light is magnified. The larger the diameter of the telescope, the more light it collects making the image at the focus brighter so as well as magnifying the image a telescope also allows one to see fainter objects.
13.7 billion light years is as we can see. This is because the light is still traveling to us and we are yet to see it.
An optical telescope.
Most optical magnifying units use compound lenses. Lenses that are made to focus light onto a spot or spread it out. A combination of them makes the best optics. Lenses are ground as convex and concave.
With a telescope, yes. You can't see it without a telescope though.
A telescope as actually a light bucket. It collects light from the objects in space using either a lens, or more usually a mirror.A main mirror reflects the light to a smaller one,which begins the light to a focus where an image of the object is formed