short answer....no.
No, Earth is larger than Eris. Earth has a diameter of about 12,742 kilometers, while Eris has a diameter of about 2,326 kilometers.
Eris is several times larger than Ceres.
Eris's moon Dysnomia, appears to be made of material similar to Eris and Eris appears almost grey.
No, Mercury is larger than Eris. Mercury is one of the four terrestrial planets in our solar system and is the smallest of the four. Eris is a dwarf planet located beyond Neptune in the Kuiper Belt.
No
No, Earth is larger than Eris. Earth has a diameter of about 12,742 kilometers, while Eris has a diameter of about 2,326 kilometers.
no
Eris is several times larger than Ceres.
Ceres and Eris are not planets; they are dwarf planets. Eris is much larger than Ceres.
No, Eris is a dwarf planet, and is larger than Pluto and farther from the Sun.
Yes. Eris has a moon called Dysnomia.
Eris's moon Dysnomia, appears to be made of material similar to Eris and Eris appears almost grey.
No. With a radius of about 1,160 kilometers, Eris is significantly smaller than Mercury, the smallest planet with a radius of about 2440 kilometers.
Earth's Moon has a diameter of about 3,474 kilometers, while Eris, a dwarf planet located in the Kuiper Belt, has a diameter of approximately 2,326 kilometers. This means the Moon is about 1.5 times larger than Eris. In terms of volume, the Moon is significantly larger as well, holding a greater mass compared to Eris.
Eris is another dwarf planet that is sometimes called Pluto's twin. All though, it is slightly bigger than pluto. It was named after Eris, the Greek goddess of Discord.
No, Mercury is larger than Eris. Mercury is one of the four terrestrial planets in our solar system and is the smallest of the four. Eris is a dwarf planet located beyond Neptune in the Kuiper Belt.
If the moon was bigger than the Earth, than Earth would orbit it and, by our current definitions, it would be a moon.