At what magnification can satellites be seen?
Hey. I was wondering at what magnification you could see satellites. I have binoculars with 12x magnification. Is that enough?
LG
Hey. I was wondering at what magnification you could see satellites. I have binoculars with 12x magnification. Is that enough?
LG
Hey, I recently heard from a friend that if you were in deep space, outside the galaxy, you would see absolutely nothing but darkness. Shouldn't you be able to see the individual galaxies? Or does it have something to do with expansion? thanks in advance 😅
How likely is it that life forms developed on Mars in the past but became extinct after Mars lost its water?
Hello. For example, I discovered a road on this planet. And I wanted to ask what it could be? Could it be that some aliens are driving around on this planet?
I think a lot about our space and am always very interested in learning more. I am now wondering whether it would be physically possible to shoot a ship or perhaps a mini island into space, which would then maintain its position in orbit like a small planet?
Of course, this depends heavily on the height of the satellite or whether it is geostationary. In the night it can also be seen by the lights with the free eye.
The problem is the low light intensity. When the object flies high enough, like the ISS, and sunlight reflects, you can also see it with a naked eye.
Even at 140 times the magnification, the ISS, which is now much larger than any motherly satellite, appears in my telescope only as a bright point. With a binoculars you can definitely not see.
You know them with a clear eye.
Then belong to the brighter stars and move over the horizon within minutes
And from what magnification do you already recognize the solar wings?
Forget it. The solar panels are what you can see as a little bit.
They are too fast for observation, so you need automatically readjusting devices.
You’d have to invest between 5,000-10,000.
The top models of Iphone can dissolve the other planets like Mars and the moon is detailed.
Ah ok thank you