Although you will not get the same views with your eyes, as you do with devices such as Hubble, JWST, or even a backyard telescope, there are still a lot of cool things to see with your eyes in the night sky. Here are some of my favorites.
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the planets
Most of our solar system’s planets can actually be seen with the eye (except Neptune) without thinking, although you usually have to know where you want to find them.

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Venus
Without thinking, I think Venus is the most influential. Only during sunrise and sunset appears, Venus is exceptionally bright and a yellow color glows. It is also very easy to spot, because it is only the third-shining thing in the sky, behind the moon and the sun. If you look at the western sky in the evening or in the eastern sky of the morning, you are almost looking at Venus.
Bupeter
Other planets are difficult to take out, but they are still rewarding. Jupiter, like Venus, is quite bright. In fact, Jupiter is the fourth-shining object in the sky and a different yellow color. Jupiter can appear in any hour based on the orbital positions of Earth and Jupiter, so you cannot rely on time of the day, but if you see something bright that is not Venus, you are probably looking at Jupiter.
Because Jupiter is very bright, if you hold it with a new moon and no light pollution at a night, it can also put the shade.
It is also theoretically possible to see some Moon of Jupiter without binoculars or binoculars, although you will need an imperfect vision and an incredibly stable hand. Jupiter is so bright that it sinks comparatively to dim moon.
If you want to try to see them, then search for some very thin and keep it out so that it just cover Jupiter. If your eyes are quite sharp, you can see the moon on both sides of the planet. A friend swears that he manages it in a camp trip, although I can never see him.
Mars planet
The most distinctive feature about Mars is the color: it is RedIf you are just scanning the sky, then there is a good chance that you will completely take out Mars due to color. This is not particularly bright, though. On rare occasions, Mars experiences the storms of violent dust surrounding the entire planet.
When this happens, you cannot solve the surface details even with binoculars, but the planet appears marginally bright in the night sky.

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Mars has many wires of its bow.
Both Shani and Uranus are also visible, but there is nothing to see. Saturn looks like a yellow, medium-vigorous star-you cannot see rings.
It is even more difficult to get Uranus out. As long as you do not have the ideal viewing situation, fast vision, and properly know where to see, you will not be able to spot it.
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Open cluster
If you want to see a little longer than a planet, then open cluster is a great place to start. Made of hundred to thousands of wires, open clusters are not tightly tied as other types of star groups, such as young mass clusters or circular clusters.
The argument is the most famous open cluster, known as Consumption Sisters. Located some 440 light years from the Earth, the argument cluster actually consists of more than 3000 stars, although most of them do not appear for naked eyes.
The arguments are quite bright that you can see it directly in the position of medium viewing, although looking a little in the side you will get a better view.
To detect arguments in the sky, find the first Orion’s belt (three stars famous in a row), and roughly follow the line they cross their bow. From there, it would be difficult to remember the argument. It is easy to present during the winter months, when arguments will appear throughout the night. However, you can see it in the late summer months in the eastern sky if you get up before sunrise.
In addition to the arguments, Bihaive Cluster, Caldwell 14, and Colainders are all open clusters that appear for naked eyes. If you are trying to present them, pay attention to your peripheral vision – it is better to spot slow objects.

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Near and far galaxy
In addition to our own galaxy, Milky Way, the most bright galaxy in the night sky is Andromeda Galaxy, some 2.5 million light years away.
In good conditions, you will be able to easily take out the galactic center, as it looks like a coin -shaped blur.
See just below Cassopia (which looks like a large W). I always find it helpful to think that the part of W makes an arrow that points to Andromeda.
If you are in the southern hemisphere (or above the equator in the Northern Hemisphere), you can also see large and small Magalanic clouds, two small galaxies in our local cluster.
Like Andromeda Galaxy, both of them are seen as unconscious spots in the sky, although most of them can bring out any camera out of some detail if you take an exposure shot for a long time.
There are some others, but they are also challenging for those who know where they are, what they are looking, and the ideal sky.
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Seasonal meteor showers
Meteor rain is a tonne fun, and fortunately, there are many every year.
The best are probably purses and geminids. In the first two weeks of December, and the most active in the middle of the middle-August, and geminides are at the peak.
Because many meteors are quite slow, your approach to them is subject to the craze of nature. Fog and clouds will block them completely, and even high humidity can cause a mist that will obscure the dimer meteor. The Moon can also obscure your viewing.

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Rare or unexpected comet
Comets are large pieces of rock that are hurt by the outer solar system, losing ice and dust because they come close and close to the sun.
Sometimes, when we are very lucky, the lost material is brilliantly illuminated with the sun, which brightens a tail to see from the earth.
Some comets appear on a predicted cycle, such as Haley’s comets, but most are much more random, and they are difficult to predict more than a few months. Even if scientists see one coming, it is often not possible to know how bright it will be.
However, when they show, they are great.
Modern phones are also great if you want to take pictures of open groups or galaxies. You just need to activate astrophotography mode, set your phone on something strong, and tap on the button.
This is a great way to spot other interesting objects in the night sky that you can otherwise miss.