One day on Haumea is 2 hours
A day on Haumea is just 3.9155 hours. A year is equal to 284.12 Earth-years.
A day on Haumea is very short compared to here on Earth. Haumea's rotational period is just 3.9155 hours.
Haumea has a gravitational pull of 0.63m/s2, or between one fifteenth and one sixteenth that of Earth.
Haumea has a gravitational pull of just 0.63m/s2, which is between one fifteenth and one sixteenth of that of Earth.
Haumea makes a complete rotation in just 3.9155 hours, making its day very short compared to Earth's.
A day on Haumea is just 3.9155 hours. A year is equal to 284.12 Earth-years.
A day on Haumea is very short compared to here on Earth. Haumea's rotational period is just 3.9155 hours.
Haumea has a gravitational pull of 0.63m/s2, or between one fifteenth and one sixteenth that of Earth.
Haumea has a gravitational pull of just 0.63m/s2, which is between one fifteenth and one sixteenth of that of Earth.
Haumea makes a complete rotation in just 3.9155 hours, making its day very short compared to Earth's.
Haumea takes 283.28 years to orbit the Sun.
Haumea is sometimes known by its minor-planet designation, 136108 Haumea.
Most are round, but Haumea is an oval ellipsoid. One of the qualifications for an object to be designated a 'dwarf planet' is that it has 'hydrostatic equilibrium', i.e. not a loose agglomeration constantly changing shape. Haumea has one longer axis, making it 'melon-shaped' but apparently stable. Haumea's shape is thought to be caused by its rapid rotation around its long axis, a single complete rotation requiring just 4 hours.
Haumea is one of the newly-discovered Kuiper Belt Objects out beyond the orbit of Neptune. It has a perihelion distance of about 35 AU.
Haumea's rotational period is 3.9155 hours.
Hi`iaka and Namaka, two of the daughters of Haumea
No. Haumea is not classified as a planet. It is a dwarf planet.