Can a telescope see the moon landing site?

Short answer: Theoretically, yes, but practically, no. It would take an incredibly powerful telescope to see signs of moon landings on the lunar surface, and even the best telescopes we have today are not remotely powerful enough to capture clear images of those signs.
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Can the Hubble telescope see the Apollo landing sites?

Can Hubble see the Apollo landing sites on the Moon? No, Hubble cannot take photos of the Apollo landing sites. “An object on the Moon 4 meters (4.37 yards) across, viewed from HST, would be about 0.002 arcsec in size.
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Can you see the footprint on the moon with a telescope?

In reality, all Earth-based telescopes have a much lower practical magnification limit around 300 times. This means that under typical seeing conditions from the surface of the Earth and using a large telescope, the footprints on the surface of the moon are something like 1,000 times too small to be seen.
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Are there photos of the moon landing sites?

On Tuesday, September 6, NASA released new high-resolution photos of the Apollo 12, 14 and 17 landing sites, from vantage points as close as 21 kilometers from the surface. The pictures were taken by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO), a mapping satellite that has been in lunar orbit since 2009.
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Is the US flag still on the Moon?

Images taken by a Nasa spacecraft show that the American flags planted in the Moon's soil by Apollo astronauts are mostly still standing. The photos from Lunar Reconaissance Orbiter (LRO) show the flags are still casting shadows - except the one planted during the Apollo 11 mission.
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Apollo 13 Views of the Moon in 4K



Can you see the items left on the Moon?

That means that there would be no way to discern the Lunar Excursion Module or any of the other equipment left on the moon. It is just too small to pick up, even with the world's best telescope.
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How big of a telescope do you need to see the moon landing?

The telescope was used to image the Moon and provided a resolution of 130 meters (430 ft), which was not good enough to resolve the 4.2 meters (14 ft) wide lunar landers or their long shadows.
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Can you see moon landing equipment from Earth?

Short answer: Theoretically, yes, but practically, no. It would take an incredibly powerful telescope to see signs of moon landings on the lunar surface, and even the best telescopes we have today are not remotely powerful enough to capture clear images of those signs.
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Can you see the flag on the moon with Google Earth?

If you already have Google Earth 5.0 on your computer, just click on the tab on the top toolbar that has a picture of Saturn, and click on Moon. If you click on the Apollo 11 flag, you can zoom in on that location and take a tour of the first landing site on the Moon!
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Why can't telescopes see the surface of the Moon?

Since ultraviolet light is blocked by gases in the Earth's atmosphere, ground-based telescopes can't use it to observe the lunar surface.
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Why can't we see the Moon rover?

The lunar landers are a little over 4 meters across (seen from above) and are about 384,403,000 meters away. That means that the landers subtend an angle of about 0.002 arcseconds. In order to see this from Earth, we'd need a telescope that is, at absolute minimum, about 200 meters across.
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Can we see Apollo hardware on the Moon?

It's clearly impossible for an optical telescope on the Earth to resolve any of the Apollo hardware on the Moon, since the best systems, using adaptive optics in the near-infrared, can resolve details of maybe 0.02 arcsec. A lunar lander of width 5 meters, at a distance of 382,000 km, subtends an angle of 0.003 arcsec.
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How many countries have walked on the Moon?

The United States, the Soviet Union and China are the three nations which have successfully landed their spacecraft on the moon. And, the US is the only country to have ever put people on the moon.
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How did NASA get past the Van Allen radiation belt?

The Earth parking orbit is under the inner radiation belt; it traversed the inner zone of the outer belt in about 30 minutes and through the most energetic region in about 10 minutes. On its way back, its trajectory was optimised such that Apollo 11 would steer clear of the belts as much as possible.
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How many countries have put a man on the Moon?

Simple math dictates that the United States has put a total of 12 men on the Moon. Surprisingly, to date, no other country has sent a manned spacecraft to the Lunar surface.
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What if Hubble pointed at Earth?

If Hubble looked at the Earth — from its orbit of approximately 600 km above the earth's surface — this would in theory correspond to 0.3 metres or 30 cm. Quite impressive! But Hubble would have to look down through the atmosphere, which would blur the images and make the actual resolution worse.
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Where is the Moon buggy now?

The maps were brought back to Earth and are now on display at the National Air and Space Museum.
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Can Parachute be used to land on the Moon?

The Moon has no atmosphere so there is no drag on the capsule to slow its descent; parachutes will not work.
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What was left on the Moon?

Aside from trash—from food packaging to wet wipes—nearly 100 packets of human urine and excrement have been discarded. The Apollo astronauts also dumped tools and television equipment that they no longer needed.
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Can you see the Moon buggy from Earth?

A common question is whether the Apollo 11 landing site on the Moon can be seen from Earth. Unfortunately the landing craft are too small to be seen by even the largest Earth-based telescopes, but you can still see the spot where the Lunar Module touched down on 20 July 1969.
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Are there nail clippers on the moon?

Rather than bring used cleaning supplies home on the return trip, astronauts have abandoned numerous everyday items on the surface. The list includes earplugs, towels, soap, nail clippers, watchbands, gloves, and boots.
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How much space junk is on the moon?

Humans have left over 187,400 kilograms (413,100 lb) of material on the Moon.
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Can you bounce a laser off the moon?

That's one precise laser shot. For the first time, scientists have successfully bounced a laser off a mirror that's attached to a spacecraft whirling around the moon. Bouncing lasers off mirrors on the lunar surface is an old trick. Astronauts walking on the moon first left reflectors behind in 1969.
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Who owns the moon?

The short answer is that no one owns the Moon. That's because of a piece of international law. The Outer Space Treaty of 1967, put forward by the United Nations, says that space belongs to no one country.
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Can you see the flag on the moon?

Yes, the flag is still on the moon, but you can't see it using a telescope. I found some statistics on the size of lunar equipment in a Press Kit for the Apollo 16 mission. The flag is 125 cm (4 feet) long, and you would need an optical wavelength telescope around 200 meters (~650 feet) in diameter to see it.
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