Stargazing *Question about Mercury, and viewing it from various view (binoculars to hubble)

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Mercury appears as a faint star to the naked eye, primarily visible just before dawn due to its proximity to the sun. In binoculars, it remains small and disk-like but lacks significant detail. A small telescope can reveal Mercury's disk shape, measuring around 8-10 arcseconds, allowing for some surface texture observation. Hubble images of Mercury are rare, as the telescope is typically not pointed near the sun. Overall, viewing variations depend significantly on the equipment used, with increasing detail visible through telescopes compared to the naked eye or binoculars.
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Hi guys,

Im just starting to get into viewing. I have a question about Mercury though.

Can someone give me an idea of what mercury looks like from the Naked eye, binoculars, telescope, and hubble. Mainly I am trying to get what variations in colour, texture, surface details/features, are noticable with each different view.

Thanks.
 
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By eye it's basically a failry faint star, it's too small to see as planet-like and since it's always so close to the sun you can only generally see it just before dawn.

It's around 8-10" at best so should be visible as a disk in a small telescope, Probably aren't many Hubble photos because you wouldn't want to point the HST that close to the sun!
 
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