With the naked eye, you can see Mercury (white-yellow), Venus (white), Earth (look down), Mars (orange-red), Jupiter (white), Saturn (white-yellow) and, if you have excellent eyes, in extremely dark skies, Uranus (white-green).
2006-08-17 12:54:37
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answer #1
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answered by gadjitfreek 5
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From the place? Do you have sparkling skies without various sunshine pollutants? are you able to work out numerous stars? With the bare eye, planets will look as tiny disks that look steadier than the "twinkling" of stars. As to whilst, there will be a pair very almost each and every night, sometime in the process the night - Venus is basically seen shortly after sunlight set or in the previous sunlight upward push (yet no longer the two on the comparable time) the place is continuously changing, you will could use an internet site that makes a crude photograph of the night sky out of your area and shows you the place they are at a given time of night - a splendidly seen Saturn interior the western sky at 8 pm would be long previous by utilising night
2016-12-17 12:45:21
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answer #2
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answered by howling 4
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Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn are pretty easy. Jupiter and Mars appear reddish, Mars more so. Saturn appears more yellow in the sky. Venus is very often the brightest star in the sky within an hour of sunrise or sunset, depending on where it is relative to the earth.
I have seen both Uranus and Neptune with the naked eye, but my vision isn't good enough anymore. In both of those cases, I knew exactly where to look (as in "3 degrees south of the crescent moon") and I confirmed my sighting in binoculars (to know that what I say wasn't a star). You need perfect conditions to see those two, a very dark night, far away from the city's lights.
2006-08-17 14:13:07
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answer #3
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answered by Polymath 5
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I believe we can only see up to Saturn with the naked eye. From Neptune on requires some kind of telescoping. I wish I could see Uranus, that would rock. The ones with some color would be Mercury (yellowish) and Mars (reddish). The rest look like white stars.
2006-08-17 12:59:57
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answer #4
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answered by Jon Skywalker 4
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Actually, mercury, venus, earth (since we live on it), mars, jupitur, saturn all are easily seen by the naked eye. Uranus literaly defines the line between naked eye astronomy and binocular astronomy, since it practically is invisible to the naked eye, but its just there. Its tinted with the sky its so small, so you might need binoculars to find it. However, it is visible. Also, mercury and venus, since they are within the orbit of the earth and the sun, appear in phases on earth! same with them and the earth if you were on mars!
2006-08-17 12:58:33
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answer #5
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answered by iam"A"godofsheep 5
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Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn. Sometimes they get close and appear to be stars. Venus was known as the morning and the evening star by the ancients.
2006-08-17 12:56:11
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answer #6
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answered by dunadain123 2
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"naked eye" planets:
Venus - bright orange
Mars - bright red
Jupiter - orange
Saturn - yellow
2006-08-17 15:05:54
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Earth...look all aroung you its all colors
Look at a book of planets...all color as well.
2006-08-17 13:33:13
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answer #8
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answered by Rosy 2
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sometimes you can see the color red of mars only for like 2 days out of the year though!
2006-08-17 12:55:05
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answer #9
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answered by Lor-the-Giraffe 3
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All the planets...with technology and a very good telescope.
2006-08-17 12:52:49
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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