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can you see stars all the time through a tlescope or just on certain night s when the sky is righ?? If so what sort of sky should it be? Also when looking at a star does it look like a big ball of light? And are you able to see planets?

2007-12-03 06:24:33 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

7 answers

Depends on the telescope, the weather, the moon, and your location. Light pollution is becoming more and more of a hindrance to deep sky observation.

The best telescopes will make stars look like pinpoints of light, but the bright stars tend to shimmer and shoot out rays, characteristic of thermal layers in the atmosphere. This error of appearance is also caused by the quality of the optics and your own eye.

You will never own a telescope which is capable of resolving a star's diameter. Any effect you get which makes it look like it has a size, is an aberration.

Planets in good telescopes should appear as roundish disks, except when you are seeing Venus or Mercury in phase. When a planet appears too bright, you get the same kind of aberration that you get with stars. Use a higher magnification to make it appear less bright.

2007-12-03 06:28:01 · answer #1 · answered by Brant 7 · 3 0

You need a clear sky to see the stars with a telescope. A telescope cannot look around corners or through clouds. A telescope is just like your eye, if you had REALLY good vision.

The stars are SO far away that even in a large telescope they look no bigger than they do normally. They just look like tiny points of light.

Yes, you can see planets. They look like the pictures you see in all the books and so on.

2007-12-03 06:30:08 · answer #2 · answered by campbelp2002 7 · 1 0

Where you point the telescope has to be free of clouds. Stars never look like balls of light because even the biggest telescopes see them as point dots. The points get bigger in the photographs because the sky is always blurry, due to our moving atmosphere.

Planets, on the other hand, do show a disk through even the smallest telescopes.

They say stars twinkle and planets dont. This is basically true. The starts twinkle because the light is constantly wobbling its way through our atmosphere towards your eye.

2007-12-03 06:31:08 · answer #3 · answered by laird 2 · 2 0

certainly what you gotta do is first come across a evening image of the U. S. thinking approximately an infra-crimson digital camera . under those circumstances everywhere that has any style of civilization in in any respect will look as a white spot on the map bypass to the main basically available and yet darkest place on the map -the section around Canyonlands NP works , positioned down a dozing bag , get nekkid ,stare on the heavens, enable the universe do it particularly is magic and make you experience smaller then you definately ever have felt before . I did that once interior the back-u . s . of GCNP and while i presumed on the subject of the thought that something or somebody could have certainly made all that i improve into observing ,the absurdity of that concept hit me so no longer effortless that i for my area busted out guffawing. think of ,i'm thoroughly on my own ,the closest individual is a minimal of each and every week faraway from me.i'm nekkid and that i'm guffawing out loud. Then the actuality improve into revealed to me in all it particularly is humbling glory and in between the main humbling locations on earth ;That existence on earth is an twist of destiny That it has no organization in any respect going on and yet it did and that that's the real miracle

2016-12-17 05:49:56 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

my dad has a telescope. when we got it we bought a booklet thing with it. te got a round thing with two layers and you move the top layer round to show you what part of the sky you can see at that time of year. hard to explain but short answer is it depends on what type of day, what type of the year and how good your telescope is.

2007-12-04 08:28:57 · answer #5 · answered by rach 3 · 0 0

Yes I can see stars and planets all the time in all nights, except on a cloudy night :-)

2007-12-03 06:33:11 · answer #6 · answered by EsBee 2 · 1 0

How about what does Earth look like from Mars-------- ???
Neat photos from Global Surveyor------
http://www.msss.com/mars_images/moc/2003/05/22/

Don't expect your scope to do this! :) However if you have several hundred million dollars to spend--------- ???? Ha.
:)

2007-12-03 07:04:31 · answer #7 · answered by Bullseye 7 · 0 0

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