a telescope because if you never heard of the Hubble telescope that is like the international telescope.
Eight bodies from our solar system were known:Sun, Mercury, Venus, Earth, Moon, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn An addition, there were thousands of stars easily visible with the eye, but those probably aren't what you're asking about.
the Hubble space telescope
bolth planets are gas planets and close to the same distance from the sun
Neptune was discovered using a telescope.Uranus was discovered with the naked eye, but because of it's slow rotation it was believed to be a star. Only with a telescope was it identified as a planet.
through a telescope :)
yes as you know we use the telescope to see other planets. since we had the telescope, we have discovered five new planets in our solar system which lay beyond pluto
a telescope because if you never heard of the Hubble telescope that is like the international telescope.
Eight bodies from our solar system were known:Sun, Mercury, Venus, Earth, Moon, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn An addition, there were thousands of stars easily visible with the eye, but those probably aren't what you're asking about.
the Hubble space telescope
You do not have to look through the telescope. It just familiarizes you with the solar system : the three planets (jungle, ice, and fire) and the nearby moon.
bolth planets are gas planets and close to the same distance from the sun
Nobody invented Uranus. It was a planet which was formed from the planetary nebula surrounding the Sun form which all the planets of the solar system formed. This happened about 4.5 billion years ago, long before there was any human being to invent anything.
Two in our own solar system, and nearly 1,000 in orbit around other stars.
The other planets in the Solar system all need a telescope to give reasonable data. Thi sapplies to the Moon as well.
Neptune was discovered using a telescope.Uranus was discovered with the naked eye, but because of it's slow rotation it was believed to be a star. Only with a telescope was it identified as a planet.
He invented a system for classifying galaxy morphologies (shapes). The Hubble Space Telescope is named after him, but he did not invent it.