Nothing 'happened' to it. It is just that Eris was discovered in 2005. Eris is 27% larger than Pluto, so they reclassified Pluto as a "dwarf planet." So Pluto, Eris, and the asteroid Ceres are the dwarf planets in our solar system that we know of so far.
Charon was once a candidate for being a solar planet, I believe, but it is now considered a satellite of Pluto.Pluto has three known moons. The largest, Charon, is proportionally larger, compared to its primary, than any other satellite of a known planet or dwarf planet in the solar system. The other two moons, Nix and Hydra, are much smaller.-Pluto's Natural Satellites (Wikipedia)Also, check out 'Timeline of discovery of Solar System planets and their moons' on Wikipedia. (That's the title of their article, by the way.)Sorry I didn't provide links to the wiki articles. I'm doing this anonymously, and I don't feel like figuring out the site for one answer when I'm on someone else's computer. Just copy and paste the titles of the articles if you want to read them.
Eris is a dwarf planet, because it is sufficiently massive that it's formed into a spheroid due to its own gravity, but it has not cleared its orbital path, as it would need to in order to be considered a planet. Eris is the largest known object in the Kuiper Belt.
We have never been to a dwarf planet before. Researchers and Scientists and maybe even Historians have pared up to answer this question. We can not go to a dwarf planet because we do not have enough fuel. Unless, technology gets higher. We do know that dwarf planets are made from rocky and icy materials. They are made from the left over Kuiper belt objects. They did not have enough room to grow. if they had more material for them, then they would have grown much larger. Then the great big gas giants pushed them out to the far reaches of the solar system. It is unknown why there was no more material for dwarf planets to grow much larger. Remember: All planets are ROUND. To learn more about this you can check out the movie Nova: The PLUTO Files. Hope this helps! ~Emily
A sensory verb is a type of verb that describes perception through the five senses (sight, sound, touch, taste, smell). These verbs help convey sensory experiences and create vivid imagery in writing. Examples include "see," "hear," "feel," "taste," and "smell."
Nothing 'happened' to it. It is just that Eris was discovered in 2005. Eris is 27% larger than Pluto, so they reclassified Pluto as a "dwarf planet." So Pluto, Eris, and the asteroid Ceres are the dwarf planets in our solar system that we know of so far.
no other planet within billions of miles of earth has any life, dwarf planets probably wouldn't have enough gravity to keep an atmosphere needed for life anyway.We are alone in the universe, but don't feel bad, there are 6.8 Billion other people on earth.
if i were to ever enter a dwarf village, i would feel tall. to feel tall would be too much. therefore i would have to put all dwarves on a stretching maching that the Americans have made. now to enter my dwarf village, you shall feel short, because they are no longer short they are ...the opposite.
All you can really smell is nature. You can feel the wind blowing and smell trees and the wilderness.
It is very small and composed mostly of ice. It has a moon that is large in comparison to it. It has a very eccentric orbit, getting closer to the sun than Neptune during its orbit. It used to be the ninth planet in the solar system, but is now classified as a dwarf planet. Feel free to add more to the answer...
feel, touch, or exhale.
nothing
smell and feel
A rotten egg smell can definitely make a person feel sick. This is especially the case if the person has a weak stomach.
Its antenna
no
Charon was once a candidate for being a solar planet, I believe, but it is now considered a satellite of Pluto.Pluto has three known moons. The largest, Charon, is proportionally larger, compared to its primary, than any other satellite of a known planet or dwarf planet in the solar system. The other two moons, Nix and Hydra, are much smaller.-Pluto's Natural Satellites (Wikipedia)Also, check out 'Timeline of discovery of Solar System planets and their moons' on Wikipedia. (That's the title of their article, by the way.)Sorry I didn't provide links to the wiki articles. I'm doing this anonymously, and I don't feel like figuring out the site for one answer when I'm on someone else's computer. Just copy and paste the titles of the articles if you want to read them.