The cere is a fleashy part above a birds beak.
No. Ceres has a stable orbit in the asteroid belt.
Ceres is a stable object. It is not going to blow up.
Ceres is the largest object in the asteroid belt.
None. Ceres is the smallest object currently classified as a dwarf planet.
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.
Ceres does not have any moons. It is the largest object in the asteroid belt, located between Mars and Jupiter, but it does not have any natural satellites orbiting around it.
No, Ceres is not a moon. It is the largest object in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter and is classified as a dwarf planet. Moons are natural satellites that orbit planets, while Ceres is a dwarf planet that orbits the Sun directly.
No. The largest object in the asteroid belt is Ceres. Ida is much smaller.
It takes 4.6 years for Ceres to revolve around the sun.
Not likely. Ceres has a number of bright spots in one of its craters, and scientists are unsure of what they are. One suggestion is that they could be from a volcanology- a sort of volcano that erupts cold material, but no other object as small as Ceres has volcanoes.
Ceres (designated as 1 Ceres) has an average diameter of about 950 km (590 miles). It is by far the largest object in the asteroid belt. It is, however, the smallest dwarf planet. By comparison, Pluto has a diameter of about 2300 km (1430 miles).
The Sun is vastly larger than Ceres. The Sun's diameter is about 1.39 million kilometers, while Ceres, the largest object in the asteroid belt, has a diameter of about 940 kilometers. This means the Sun is roughly 1,480 times wider than Ceres. In terms of volume, the Sun is about 1.3 million times larger than Ceres.