siddharth23
- 249
- 26
Using the best technology available, how far can you see things clearly? As in how many light years?
siddharth23 said:Using the best technology available, how far can you see things clearly? As in how many light years?
bluecore said:Isn't "how far" a little bit misleading?
jackmell said:When you say "how far", I immediately think of the Hubble Deep Field and the Ultra-deep field. Are you aware of these two images?
Depends on what "the happenings" are.siddharth23 said:Given enough clarity and exposure, is it possible to observe the happenings in, say, Andromeda?
siddharth23 said:Using the best technology available, how far can you see things clearly? As in how many light years?
GeorgeDishman said:About 5.8 billion light years. That corresponds to a red shift of about 1.64. We can see light from objects which has been traveling for longer but those objects were closer when the light was emitted.
The resolution of our best telescopes is good enough to:siddharth23 said:Like volcanos on the surface of a planet. Just a crude example. Something like that.
davenn said:probably a bit hopeful there ;)
I would suggest its substantially less than that
yes we can see objects at several billion lightyears. but resolving ones out to a few 100 million ly's
note what the OP said ... "how far can you see things clearly? "
Russ's response gives a better idea of resolution problems