Yes. Eris has one known moon called Dysnomia.
The Kuiper Belt dwarf planet Eris has one known moon, named Dysnomia.
Neither: Eris is a dwarf planet in the kyper belt and is known as a KBO or Kyper belt object.
Eris is not a planet in the Milky Way galaxy; it is a dwarf planet located in the outer solar system. It is the most massive dwarf planet known to exist and is part of the Kuiper Belt, a region beyond Neptune that is home to many icy bodies.
After Eris, the closest known dwarf planet to the Sun is Haumea, followed by Makemake, and then the famous Pluto.
Yes, Eris, a dwarf planet in our solar system, does not have any natural satellites. It is one of the largest known dwarf planets and is located in the outer regions of the solar system beyond Neptune.
Eris is the largest Known Dwarf Planet in our solar system
2004
No, Eris isn't a planet, it is a dwarf planet. See the related question "What is a dwarf planet?" for more details on the differences. Eris is the largest known dwarf planet in the solar system and the ninth-largest body known to orbit the sun directly. No Iris is a satellite.
Yes, Eris is the largest known Dwarf Planet (but there could be larger ones that have not been discovered yet).
Of the five currently recognized dwarf planets, Eris is the second largest after Pluto. Pluto falls into second place in terms of mass, as Eris is denser.
No. Eris is a dwarf planet.
No. Eris is a dwarf planet.
No. First of all, Eris is not a planet; it is a dwarf planet. Eris is smaller thean Mercury, the smallest planet in the solar system. The largest planet is Jupiter. Eris is the largest of the dwarf planets.
The Kuiper Belt dwarf planet Eris has one known moon, named Dysnomia.
Eris
Neither: Eris is a dwarf planet in the kyper belt and is known as a KBO or Kyper belt object.
Eris is not a planet in the Milky Way galaxy; it is a dwarf planet located in the outer solar system. It is the most massive dwarf planet known to exist and is part of the Kuiper Belt, a region beyond Neptune that is home to many icy bodies.