A day on Haumea is just 3.9155 hours. A year is equal to 284.12 Earth-years.
Haumea takes 283.28 years to orbit the Sun.
3.9155 Earth-hours.
Waiting for the perfect launch windows, it would still take well over 10 years for a small probe to get to Haumea. A manned ship would take even longer.
A day on Haumea is very short, since its rotational period is just 3.9155 hours. It takes 284.12 Earth-years (103774 Earth-days) for it to completely orbit the Sun, which means there are 636,081.216 Haumean days in one Haumean year.
With our current spacecraft technology, getting a small probe out to the Kuiper Belt to visit a dwarf planet such as Haumea would take at least ten years. As technology improves spacecraft will get faster and more efficient, decreasing travel time, but until then it would take quite a long time.
Haumea takes 283.28 years to orbit the Sun.
Haumea's orbital period is 283 or 103,468 days
The dwarf planet Haumea is the planet with a year 280 earth years long.
3.9155 Earth-hours.
Waiting for the perfect launch windows, it would still take well over 10 years for a small probe to get to Haumea. A manned ship would take even longer.
A day on Haumea is very short, since its rotational period is just 3.9155 hours. It takes 284.12 Earth-years (103774 Earth-days) for it to completely orbit the Sun, which means there are 636,081.216 Haumean days in one Haumean year.
With our current spacecraft technology, getting a small probe out to the Kuiper Belt to visit a dwarf planet such as Haumea would take at least ten years. As technology improves spacecraft will get faster and more efficient, decreasing travel time, but until then it would take quite a long time.
Haumea is sometimes known by its minor-planet designation, 136108 Haumea.
A small, fast probe would take over 10 years to get there in the best conditions. A manned ship would take much longer.
5240 days is 14.35 years.
12,500 days is 34.22 years.
1,000,000 days is 2,737.9 years.