How do we have the equipment to picture and see cosmos and stars millions of light years away, but can’t just zoom-in to examine and view the surfaces of our interplanetary planets in the solar system?

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How do we have the equipment to picture and see cosmos and stars millions of light years away, but can’t just zoom-in to examine and view the surfaces of our interplanetary planets in the solar system?

In: Physics

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Anonymous 0 Comments

Comparing distant galaxies to nearby planets is like comparing distant mountains to a grain of sand on your outstretched finger tip.

Distant galaxies are much larger than the planets are close.

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