you would weight about 6.4% of what you do on Earth.
The common noun would be "dwarf planet."
There are only 8 major planets in the solar system, since Pluto (the old ninth planet) was re classified as a dwarf planet. If we did count the 5 additional dwarf planets, then Pluto would be the tenth one out, since there is a dwarf planet called Ceres between Mars and Jupiter.
Pluto. From its discovery in 1930 until 2006, it was considered the ninth planet. It was reclassified as a Dwarf planet in August 2006.
Pluto was considered the farthest planet until September 13th, 2006 when it was reclassified as a dwarf planet. But the correct answer would be neptune -goober;P
In our solar system, we know of only the four dwarf planets beyond Neptune: Pluto, Haumea, Makemake, and Eris. There may be more, but we don't know. The Kuiper belt begins at about the orbit of Neptune, and there is a lot of material in it to construct a planet. What other planetary bodies may lie out there other than the two dwarf planets is not known. Beyond them, there is definitely something, the mythical "tenth planet," which completes an orbit of the sun approximately every 40,000 years. The most believable explanation is that it is not a planet, but a brown dwarf star which would make our star system binary if proven. Stars come in all sizes, shapes, and colors, and they are not fickle about other stars they bond with. In the late 1990s or early 2000s, proof of planets around other stars was obtained, but we know little about them at present.
As of now, it is not possible for humans to visit Haumea, which is a dwarf planet located beyond Neptune in our solar system. It would require advanced technology and a long-duration space mission to travel to Haumea, which is not currently feasible with current capabilities.
To the best of our knowledge, no satellites or robots have directly explored the planet Haumea. Haumea is a dwarf planet located in the Kuiper Belt beyond Neptune, and its distance from Earth makes it challenging to send a mission there. Most of our knowledge about Haumea comes from observations made by telescopes on Earth.
To calculate your weight on Haumea, you'll need to know its surface gravity, which is about 0.44 times that of Earth's. To find your weight on Haumea, multiply your Earth weight by 0.44. For example, if you weigh 150 pounds on Earth, you would weigh approximately 66 pounds on Haumea.
A 100 pound man on earth is 10.20401kg. The gravitational acceleration on Haumea is .44m/s^2 so that person would weigh 4.4897956 pounds on Haumea.
As far as we know, Haumea does not have an atmosphere, so the wind speed would effectively be zero.
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.
If a dwarf star crashed into a planet,the planet would likely explode.
The time it takes to travel to Haumea, a dwarf planet located in the Kuiper Belt beyond Neptune, would depend on the spacecraft's speed and trajectory. The New Horizons spacecraft, for example, which passed by Pluto, would take many years to reach Haumea due to its distance from Earth and the speed limitations of current space travel technology.
Haumea is a dwarf planet located in our solar system's Kuiper Belt. Its gravitational pull would be significantly weaker than that of larger planets like Earth or Jupiter due to its smaller size and mass. The exact strength of its gravitational pull would depend on its distance from an object or spacecraft in its vicinity.
Yes, a dwarf planet can become a moon if it is captured by the gravitational field of a larger planet. This process can happen when a dwarf planet gets close enough to a planet and is pulled in by its gravity. Once captured, the dwarf planet would then orbit the larger planet as one of its moons.
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.
In our own solar system, there are eight major planets, ten dwarf planets, two protoplanets, and thousands of minor planets (asteroids). There are also billions of planets outside our own system, but they shall not be named here (it would be impractical to try). Below is a list, in orbital order, of major objects in the solar system, as well as how many known major objects orbit them:Sol (sun) [18 planets, three asteroid belts, two protoplanets, one theoretical dwarf star]Mercury (terrestrial planet)Venus (terrestrial planet)Earth (terrestrial planet) [1 moon, Luna]Mars (terrestrial planet) [2 moons]Asteroid BeltCeres* (dwarf planet)Vesta* (protoplanet)Pallas* (protoplanet)Jupiter (gas giant) [66 moons]Saturn (gas giant) [62 moons]Uranus (ice giant) [27 moons]Neptune (ice giant) [13 moons]Kuiper Belt [asteroids, dwarf planets]Orcus+ (dwarf planet) [1 moon, Vanth]Pluto+ (dwarf planet) [1 planet, Charon, 3 moons]Charon+ (dwarf planet) [1 planet, Pluto, 3 moons]Haumea+ (dwarf planet) [2 moons]Quaoar+ (dwarf planet) [1 moon, Weywot]Makemake+ (dwarf planet)Eris (dwarf planet) [1 moon, Dysnomia]"Snow White" (2007 OR10) (dwarf planet)Sedna (dwarf planet)Oort Cloud [comets, asteroids]Nemesis# (red dwarf star, theoretical)*Orbits within Asteroid Belt+Orbits within Kuiper Belt#Theoretical, sort of like Bigfoot