With a telescope, yes. You can't see it without a telescope though.
Yes, if you have a small telescope and know where to look. With an apparent brightness of 6.7 in the best of cases, Ceres is too dim to see with the naked eye.
Yes, definitely, and it doesn't have to be a very big telescope. In fact, there are times when you can see Ceres in a decent pair of binoculars.
No. You need a telescope to see Ceres.
The distance to Ceres varies depending on the relative positions of Earth and Ceres in our orbits. As of April 25, 2010, at 3:07 PM PDT, Ceres is at a distance of 2.158218 AU, where each AU is about 500 light-seconds. (One AU is the average distance between the Sun and the Earth.) So Ceres is currently 1079 light-seconds away. The orbit of Ceres around the Sun is an ellipse with aphelion of 2.98 AU and perihelion of 2.55 AU. When the Earth is on one side of the Sun and Ceres is on the other, our distance apart is about 3.98 AU, and when Ceres and the Earth are closest together, we are only about 1.55 AU distant. You can download the free open-source planetarium program Stellarium to see a representation of the sky and calculate the distance to any astronomical object in its database. And if you can see it, it's in there!
A day on Ceres is about 9.1 hours long.9 and a half hours. After one sunrise, the Sun sets about five hours later.The dwarf planet 1 Ceres rotates around its axis in about 9.1 hours.
The mass of Ceres is 9.43 * 1020 kg or 0.0158% of the Earth's mass.
Ceres has diameter of about 950 km earth diameter of about 12,715.43 km
The gravity on Ceres - which is a "dwarf planet" or "plutoid" in what is called the asteroid belt - is 3% of Earth's. If the weight of an average man on Earth is 175 pounds, then on Ceres he would weigh 2.25 pounds.
Earth has more gravity than Ceres does. Ceres gravity is 3% of that of Earth's.
It takes approximately 23 years to travel from Earth to Ceres.
Yes. Ceres orbits the same sun that Earth does.
no
The distance to Ceres varies depending on the relative positions of Earth and Ceres in our orbits. As of April 25, 2010, at 3:07 PM PDT, Ceres is at a distance of 2.158218 AU, where each AU is about 500 light-seconds. (One AU is the average distance between the Sun and the Earth.) So Ceres is currently 1079 light-seconds away. The orbit of Ceres around the Sun is an ellipse with aphelion of 2.98 AU and perihelion of 2.55 AU. When the Earth is on one side of the Sun and Ceres is on the other, our distance apart is about 3.98 AU, and when Ceres and the Earth are closest together, we are only about 1.55 AU distant. You can download the free open-source planetarium program Stellarium to see a representation of the sky and calculate the distance to any astronomical object in its database. And if you can see it, it's in there!
No. Ceres has a stable orbit in the asteroid belt.
Yes. Surface gravity on Ceres is about 3% that of Earth.
A day on Ceres is about 9.1 hours long.9 and a half hours. After one sunrise, the Sun sets about five hours later.The dwarf planet 1 Ceres rotates around its axis in about 9.1 hours.
The mass of Ceres is 9.43 * 1020 kg or 0.0158% of the Earth's mass.
Ceres has diameter of about 950 km earth diameter of about 12,715.43 km
Ceres measures the Earth's Radiance. The is measured in the North, South, East and West.
Ceres is about 1.765 Astronomical Units away from Earth, which is about 164,067,000 miles or 264,040,242 km.