Pluto is still considered to be the the largest KBO, however there are several "scattered" objects that are believed to have come from the Kuiper Belt. For a discussion of the sizes of known KBO's and Scattered KBO's see the related link
No. The Kuiper belt is home to a large number of ice objects including three dwarf planets. It is in our solar system and therefore much closer than the nearest stars, aside from the sun, of course.
Not exactly. Asteroids are rocky, metallic bodies whereas the Kuiper belt consists mostly of icy frozen bodies
The Kuiper belt is the group of objects outside the orbit of Neptune (at about 30 AU) out to about 50 AU from the sun. Use the links below to learn more about the Kuiper belt.
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No. No major planets are part of the Kuiper belt, which is much farther out than Saturn.
The Kuiper belt starts somewhere around Neptune's orbit. Pluto is believed to be a Kuiper Belt object.
yes
It is the most distant object known
The Kuiper belt is thought to contain matter that was left over from the formation of the solar system
Comets originate from two regions in the Solar System, the Kuiper Belt and the Oort cloud.
Sedna is the most distant solar system object discovered so far. It is about three times farther away than Pluto currently is. Because it is so far away, scientists are not sure if it has enough mass to be classified as a dwarf planet.
The Kuiper Belt
The Kuiper belt is not an object; it is a region of the solar system. Therefore it does not have an axis of rotation
it is the most distant object object known
It is the most distant object known
It is the most distant object known.
Makemake is an asteroid/Kuiper belt object in the outer solar system.
The Radio Telescope
Yes.
The solar system includes planets, asteroids, comets and other objects such as the" Kuiper Belt" objects.
The Kuiper Belt is an area of the solar system beyond the orbit of Neptune. It is believed to be a toroidal (doughnut-shaped) area that contains a lot of the left-over remnants from the formation of the solar system. Because the Kuiper Belt is so distant and all of the matter believed to be there is so small, we actually know very little about it. The planet Pluto is now believed to be a Kuiper Belt object rather than a "proper" planet; a rocky, icy body more like a giant comet than a real planet. About the other known Kuiper Belt objects, even less is known; Eris, Haumea and Makemake. There is another hypothetical region of space beyond even the Kuiper Belt. This is the "Oort Cloud".
Look up an object called Sedna, I believe it lies about 5 billion miles from earth and is pushed past the Kuiper Belt Region
quasar : a very bright, very distant object, similar to a star
Kuiper Belt objects