Name THE planet?
-- Mercury is visible as a speck near the sun at sunrise and sunset sometimes.
-- Venus is the third brightest natural object in the sky when it's visible.
-- Earth is very easy to find,both day and night. :P
-- Mars looks just like a star but if you look at stars at all you'll easily be able to tell it apart because of it's red color.
-- Jupiter is also very bright and with basic binoculars you can see its four biggest moons.
-- Saturn is the farthest naked-eye (no telescope) planet visible but is still brighter than most stars.
So the only planets you do need a telescope to see are Neptune and Uranus... and to get more than a blue spec out of either it takes quite a telescope.
Yes, you can see it without one also. To the naked eye, it looks like a fairly bright star. Using a telescope will allow you to see its ring system though.
That would be Uranus.
Earth. This question looks like it's about hundred years out of date. Some people did think the markings on Mars were canals, but that was long before our present excellent pictures of Mars.
That looks more like a code assigned by a specific manufacturer, than an astronomical discovery.
Yes, but it has to be a pretty good telescope, and you have to know just where to look. Neptune will look like a fairly faint star, you wouldn't know it was a planet unless you waited for days and observed it moving.
You know what planet Jupiter looks like by viewing it through a telescope, or looking at photos that other people have taken of it through a telescope.
If you know exactly where to look, you can see Uranus, but it looks like a very faint star. Saturn is the most distant one you can see easily.
Yes, if it is 'up'. It looks like a red-orange star.
Mars is visible at different times, depending on its position as it orbits the sun. Without a telescope, it looks like a bright star. If you have a telescope, it will look like a solid planet, which is what it is. Lots of websites will give its current position and indicate if it can be seen from Earth at the current time or not. See the link below.
Sure, but it looks like a star unless you have a telescope.
For Wii U you mean, yes. A user(we don't know her/his name yet)wants to use Unity and promises to make one for Nintendo.Release Date:Likely 2016 or 2017Rating:Possibly TPlatform:Wii U(some point probably for those computers too)It will be Star Fox Travels, an open world game with planet-travel. What we know about the game so far is the player is an avatar instead of Fox McCloud, Andross Oikonny is back as a ghost like after Star Fox 64 and planets have their own landscapes and natives.Planned Features:Papetoon is the Wolf Planet, it looks like the North Pole.Eledard is the Fox Planet, it looks like the North Pole.Corneria is the Dogstar, it looks like Europe(not counting Russia).Aquas is the Swamp Planet, it looks like a lot of carribeans.Katina is the Desert Planet, it looks like Mexico/South America/Spain.Fortuna is the Frog/Rabbit Planet, it looks like the South Pole.Fichina is the Lynx Planet, it looks like Northern Canada.Titania is the Sand Planet, it looks like Egypt.Sauria is the Dinosaur Planet, it looks like India.Zoness is the Oriental Planet, it looks like Japan/Thailand/Mongolia/Indonesia/Korea/ChinaVenom is the Demon Planet, it looks like Hell.Planned Races:WolfFoxHoundPoodleBulldogBeaugleHumanFrogRabbitCoyoteLynxCatPantherBirdJackalLionTurtleLizardPandaMonkeyApeTigerPigMouseSkunk
A comet
Because of our odd planet rotation, it looks like our planet is wobbling
Earth
All of them.
if you look on radio telescope it looks very straight and finely tuned.
Yes, you can see it without one also. To the naked eye, it looks like a fairly bright star. Using a telescope will allow you to see its ring system though.