yes
The number of dwarfs living on a dwarf planet can vary, depending on the specific planet. Generally, the term "dwarf planet" refers to celestial bodies in our solar system such as Pluto, which is uninhabited by any type of life form as we know it.
Because it was too small and it seemed to be following some other orbit rather than our sun. Its orbit was off from ours by too much time. It was faster than it should have been. ______________ I considered editing the question, but left it because it might resonate with some popular misconceptions. Pluto is still out there, and our struggles to categorize it have not diminished it one bit. It remains part of our solar system and will remain so as long as the solar system exists, barring some unforeseen disaster. It will continue to be a fascinating and inspiring object and one worth studying. Neither its size nor the speed of Pluto's orbit are factors in Pluto's categorization, although many point out that the region that far out in the solar system seems not to be the right place for a planet so small. That part of the solar system is where the gas giants live, and the smaller more rocky planets live near us. Pluto is simply no longer considered a major planet. It is a minor planet. In order for a body to be considered a planet it must orbit a sun or the remnant of a sun. Pluto does that. It must be large enough so that by force of its own gravity it has formed itself into a sphere-like shape. [Planets are not perfect spheres.] Pluto has done that too. So far so good. It must also have cleared its neighborhood of debris. No planet has done this completely; there are chunks of rock and tons of dust and ice floating around. But the major planets have no objects in the vicinity of their orbits large enough to challenge their primacy in their orbits. Here is where Pluto runs into trouble. Pluto's orbit is roughly 248 earth years. During that time Pluto spends roughly 12-14 years in the part of its orbit that takes it closer to the sun than Neptune, the outermost major planet. The rest of the time it is in what is called the Kuiper Belt, a region beyond Neptune that is filled with icy chunks, some of them rivaling the size of Pluto. Probably many of the comets that we sometimes observe spend most of their time there. In fact, Pluto may be very much like a large comet, and might act like one if it got close enough to the sun. It is all the time that Pluto spends among the many other objects in the Kuiper Belt that disqualifies it from being a major planet. Often, Pluto is referred to as a Kuiper Object. So Pluto fans, do not despair. Pluto is in reality eveything it ever was. We just don't include it on the list of major planets any more.
Yes, there's Mercury and Venus and Mars and Jupiter and Saturn and Neptune and Pluto. Pluto is a dwarf planet. The eight regular planets of the solar system are Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune.
Both planets and dwarf planets are in "hydrostatic equilibrium", which basically means that they are big enough, massive enough, and have enough gravity, to have a shape that is basically a sphere (or an ellipsoid, if the planet rotates rapidly, as is the case with Jupiter and Saturn).
The cold planets are like mars,neptune,saturn,uranus and jupiter.Some dwaft planets are cold too. The hot ones are like venus,mercury.Planet Earth is the most suitable for humans to live.
The number of dwarfs living on a dwarf planet can vary, depending on the specific planet. Generally, the term "dwarf planet" refers to celestial bodies in our solar system such as Pluto, which is uninhabited by any type of life form as we know it.
They did not send astronauts to Pluto. Also, Pluto is a dwarf planet, not a dwarf star.
We live on Earth, aliens live on Pluto, Mars, and other planets like Jupiter.
Pluto is a dwarf planet that can be found on the outermost area of our solar system, the farthest away from the Sun.
netherland dwarfs live up to 10 years but can live a lot longer if takegood care of
If you had an enclosed airtight habitat with atmosphere and life support it is technically possible. Dwarf planets are too small to have an atmopshere of their own.
It is unknown. Scientists belive that, since the life length of white dwarfs are so long, there aren't any black dwarfs in our universe yet.
Yes. Chinese dwarfs like to live in pairs or groups.
Red dwarfs are small, cool stars found in the later stages of their evolution. They have lower mass and temperature compared to larger stars like the sun. Red dwarfs can live for tens to hundreds of billions of years, making them some of the longest-lived stars in the universe.
Pretty Much. Yes They Do, Because of Where they were born is a VERY HEALTHY PLACE! Robo Dwarfs Live for 2 -4 years! I have 1 robo female i had for 3 months. And my two chinese dwarfs for 3 and 4 months
The seven dwarfs in the Snow White story lived deep in the forest. They were miners who worked to harvest diamonds.
Not unaided. But this is no slight to the dwarfs; humans couldn't live on ANY other planet without substantial life support systems.