If you are asking: What do things look like in a telescope, then the answer is: upside down and reversed left to right. The two main kinds of telescopes are reflectors and refractors. And, unless there is an erecting prism in them, everything looks upside down. Binoculars are a pair of refracting telescopes mounted so you can see through both of them at the same time. The image you see is right side up because they have erecting prisms inside them that flip the images so they look like what you see normally.
Probably Mercury, since you would have to be looking in the direction of the Sun, the overwhelming glare of which makes it almost impossible to see anything else in that direction. Or, it could be Neptune. You can't see Neptune without a telescope.
To see Saturn's rings clearly and with some detail, you would need a telescope with an aperture of at least 70mm. A telescope with a magnification of around 50-100x would provide a good view of Saturn and its rings.
a telescope because if you never heard of the Hubble telescope that is like the international telescope.
If a layer of the crust is pushed up which of the following changes would you expect to see?
Definitely, a 500-mm (20-inch) telescope is a large instrument because 500 mm is the diameter of the main mirror or lens, so the telescope would be 3-5 metres long. A telescope this size could see faint stars down to a magnitude of round about 15. Remember that you don't need any telescope at all to see stars. On a clear night in a dark place, you can see a few thousand of them with only your eyes.
Mars
when you look into the telescope you should see a blue x like in the corner click on it and there you go
You can't see constellations with a telescope. In fact, you may be looking straight into one, but you'll never notice it until you come out from behind your telescope.
He looked through the telescope and was able to see Venus better.
Dick
Probably Mercury, since you would have to be looking in the direction of the Sun, the overwhelming glare of which makes it almost impossible to see anything else in that direction. Or, it could be Neptune. You can't see Neptune without a telescope.
Yes. You are able to see Jupiter with a telescope from Earth at certain points in the year.
That would be possible, yes.
Probably Mercury, since you would have to be looking in the direction of the Sun, the overwhelming glare of which makes it almost impossible to see anything else in that direction. Or, it could be Neptune. You can't see Neptune without a telescope.
no detail on the fly, as (depending on the design) an astronomical telescope has trouble focusing any closer than about 8 metres, let alone an object actually on the objective lens. I imagine the view would be tarnished by a black smudge in the Field of view.
To see Saturn's rings clearly and with some detail, you would need a telescope with an aperture of at least 70mm. A telescope with a magnification of around 50-100x would provide a good view of Saturn and its rings.
snow