In terms of mass, Earth is about 1400 times as massive as Haumea. In terms of volume, Earth is about 722.14 times bigger.
One day on Haumea, a dwarf planet in our solar system, lasts about 4 hours. Haumea rotates on its axis very quickly compared to other planets and dwarf planets in our solar system.
A day on Haumea is very short compared to here on Earth. Haumea's rotational period is just 3.9155 hours.
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.
The equatorial surface gravity on the Plutoid dwarf Haumea is estimated at 0.44 m/s2 . That's 4.49% of Earth's. If you weigh 200 pounds on Earth and somehow scored a ride to Haumea, you'd weigh just about 9 pounds there.
Pluto is not larger than any planet it is the smallest planet that why it is call a dwarf planet.
It's a dwarf planet.
According to windows2universe.org, the surface gravity of the dwarf planet Haumea is 0.44 meters/second squared. (This is compared to Earth's gravity of 9.807 m/s squared).
One day on Haumea, a dwarf planet in our solar system, lasts about 4 hours. Haumea rotates on its axis very quickly compared to other planets and dwarf planets in our solar system.
The dwarf planet Haumea is the planet with a year 280 earth years long.
A day on Haumea is very short compared to here on Earth. Haumea's rotational period is just 3.9155 hours.
you would weight about 6.4% of what you do on Earth.
In order from least to greatest in mean radius:Vesta (protoplanet)Pallas (protoplanet)Charon+ (dwarf planet)Orcus (dwarf planet)Quaoar (dwarf planet)Ceres (dwarf planet)Sedna (dwarf planet)"Snow White" [2007 OR10]* (dwarf planet)Haumea* (dwarf planet)Makemake (dwarf planet)Pluto+ (dwarf planet)Eris (dwarf planet)Mercury (terrestrial planet)Mars (terrestrial planet)Venus (terrestrial planet)Earth (terrestrial planet)Neptune (ice giant)Uranus (ice giant)Saturn (gas giant)Jupiter (gas giant)*There is a slight discrepancy as to how Haumea ought to be measured, due to its unusual shape. This makes it slightly unclear as to which is considered larger between Haumea and "Snow White."+Binary planet
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.
Like all dwarf planets, Haumea is significantly smaller than Earth.
The equatorial surface gravity on the Plutoid dwarf Haumea is estimated at 0.44 m/s2 . That's 4.49% of Earth's. If you weigh 200 pounds on Earth and somehow scored a ride to Haumea, you'd weigh just about 9 pounds there.
Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars. then the 5 dwarf planets, Ceres, Eris, Haumea, Makemake, and Pluto
The dwarf planet Eris truly deserves its designation as "dwarf planet"; it is less than one quarter of Earth's diameter, and about one percent of Earth's mass.