The first person to view Mars with a telescope was Gallileo.
yes
The first person to see Mercury with a telescope is believed to be Galileo Galilei in the early 17th century. He observed the phases of Mercury, similar to those of the Moon, which supported the heliocentric model of the solar system.
All telescopes will see Mars. The larger the scope, the more light that will be collected and the better the image will be of mars. With certain filters, you will be able to disseminate the different areas on the planet.
You can see Mars without a telescope when it is visible in the night sky and relatively close to Earth during its opposition, which occurs approximately every two years. Mars is typically visible to the naked eye as a bright reddish-orange object in the sky during these times.
Yes, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn had been discovered several millennia before the invention of the telescope.
yes
Yes, through a telescope
Yes. Mars has been known since ancient times, long before the telescope was invented.
You can see Earth, Mars, the Moon and galaxies!
Mars
You would need a telescope to see the moons of Mars, Phobos and Diemos, since their apparent magnitudes are +11.3 and +12.4 respectively. But with a good telescope and good conditions you can see them from Earth.
Certainly. Mars is often highly visible with the naked eye.
i think so , in a certain month
Without a telescope you probably couldn't see earth's moon from Mars.
The first person to see Mercury with a telescope is believed to be Galileo Galilei in the early 17th century. He observed the phases of Mercury, similar to those of the Moon, which supported the heliocentric model of the solar system.
All telescopes will see Mars. The larger the scope, the more light that will be collected and the better the image will be of mars. With certain filters, you will be able to disseminate the different areas on the planet.
With a suitably giant telescope, probably yes.