Ceres is the largest of the asteroids, in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. Originally, astronomers thought it was the "missing planet" between Mars and Jupiter, but more observations revealed that there were a great many objects in that region. In 2006, the International Astronomical Union defined a "planet" for the first time, and came up with a definition of "dwarf planet" that included Pluto and Ceres.
With conventional rocket engines, it would take about 3 years to reach Ceres.
No, there are no new planets in our solar system. They have all been here for a long time! Our solar system has eight planets, since Pluto was downgraded to a dwarf planet. There are some new dwarf planets: Eris, Ceres, and the newest MakeMake. There are about a dozen more candidates for dwarf planet status. Pluto, Eris, and MakeMake are also considered plutiods, which means they are beyond Neptune's orbit. See Related Links below for more information.
No, a dwarf planet is smaller than a planet but bigger than an asteroid, and dwarf planets tend to be a long way out, like Pluto and Eris.
From its discovery in 1930 until its degradation in 2006 Pluto was considered the solar system's ninth planet. Now it is considered a dwarf planet, and one of 5 official dwarf planets.
They would hit the surface together, after a very long time. Gravity on Ceres is pretty light.
Dwarf planets by their definition do not have a specific place in which they are necessarily located, but as it pertains to our solar systems, a majority of the dwarf planets have been located beyond Neptune, in a region of the system known as the Kuiper Belt. The only current dwarf planet in the inner solar system is Ceres, in the Asteroid Belt.A dwarf planet is defined asAn object with sufficient mass to generate enough self-gravity to attain hydrostatic equilibrium (meaning a near sperical shape)An object that is not a satellite of another planetary bodyOne that (unlike the major planets) has not sufficiently cleared its orbit of other astronomical bodies.Pluto is now classified as a Dwarf Planet thanks in part to the discovery of several other objects in the belt of similiar, if not larger, mass within the Kuiper Belt, known collectively as KBOs, Kuiper Belt Objects. Another example of a dwarf planet would be Ceres, located in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. There is also Eris, which is an example of a series of objects collectively known in our system as Trans-Neptunian Objects-TNOs. Neptune's own moon of Triton has been theorized to be a Dwarf planet-TNO that was captured by planet's gravity after being knocked out of it's original orbit within the Belt. The remaining dwarf planets are Haumea and Makemake in the Kuiper Belt.
About 3 years with conventional rockets
The dwarf planet 1 Ceres orbits around the Sun once in 4.6 years.
No. Ceres is single object, not a class of objects. Ceres was long called the largest asteroid in the solar system, but it has since been reclassified as a dwarf planet.
A day is 9.1 hours unlike earth which is 24 hours in a day.
The largest body in the asteroid belt is Ceres, with a diameter of about 950 km. Although it has long been considered to be an asteroid, Ceres was classified as a "dwarf planet" on August 24, 2006. (The other dwarf planets are Pluto, Makemake, Haumea, and Eris.) The issue of whether Ceres remains an asteroid was not addressed at that time.
A black dwarf is not a planet; it is the remnant of a long dead star that has cooled. A black dwarf would range from about 7,000 to 17,000 miles in diameter.
The answer to this question can be simplified because Ceres is much nearer than any other dwarf planet in our solar system. Ceres is in the Asteroid Belt which lies between Mars and Jupiter All the other known Dwarf Planets lie in the Kuyper Belt passed and beyond the reaches of Neptune's Orbit of the Sun. Ceres was then (1801) under mathematical scrutiny as to it's very existence and it's orbit was then unknown. Ceres is only 580 miles across but from earth would be much larger visually from a reasonable telescope than say Pluto or any other of the Dwarf planets in the Kuyper Belt. Ceres is the first ever asteroid to be discovered
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Ceres has a rotation period of 0.3781 days, and an orbital period of 4.6 years.
11,013.05 years
Ceres was the first asteroid belt object to be discovered, and astronomers of the time had long speculated that a planet might exist between the orbits of Jupiter and Mars. Later, the discovery of other asteroid belt objects cast doubt on Ceres' status as a planet.
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.