Can telescopes see flag moon?
Emily Carr
Published May 15, 2026
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.
How strong of a telescope to see the flag on the moon?
The flag on the moon is 125cm (4 feet) long. You would require a telescope around 200 meters in diameter to see it. The largest telescope now is the Keck Telescope in Hawaii at 10 meters in diameter. Even the Hubble Space telescope is only 2.4 meters in diameter.Can you still see flag on 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.Can you see the flag on the moon with a camera?
Robinson said the Apollo 11 flag cannot be photographed because it's on the ground; the orbiter cameras can only capture the shadow of the flags around poles. But even if the flags are fallen or faded, they continue to loom large in the history of space exploration.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.Can You See The Flag On the Moon? : Resolution [Telescopes: Eyes On the Universe]
Is the American flag still on the moon from 1969?
The Six FlagsA stamp printed in the USA shows First Moon Landing, July 20, 1969, NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter managed to take images of five of the six flags back in 2012, and it was clear that they were still there.