The dwarf planet candidate Sedna (90377 Sedna) has no assigned symbol, and only Pluto and Ceres do.
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No, Sedna is a dwarf planet located in the outer reaches of the solar system and does not have an atmosphere that could support human respiration.
I honestly don't know for sure what Sedna was made out of. I know that dwarf planets are normally made out of rocky and maybe some icy things too. And as you know, Sedna is a dwarf planet. Iv'e always wondered. Maybe you could look up Sedna off of Wikipedia or you can watch on youtube "the mystery of Sedna." I love space. Hope this helps! ~Emily
Pluto, Sedna, and Quaoar are all solid objects with icy surfaces and are small when compared to the planets of the solar system. Saturn is a giant planet primarily composed of hydrogen and helium. It does not have a solid surface.
Minor Planet number 90377 Sedna has never been moved from the asteroid classification. The IAU hasn't received enough data to say it is a dwarf planet because observations to check for things like hydrostatic equilibrium is so difficult for an object in the far out scattered disc section it resides in. Asteroids do not have hydrostatic equilibrium whereas Dwarf Planets do. Sedna may very well qualify as a Dwarf Planet; we just don't know yet.
Pluto is located in the Kuiper Belt, a region of the outer solar system beyond the orbit of Neptune. Sedna is a distant dwarf planet located in the outer region of the solar system beyond the Kuiper Belt. Quaoar is also a dwarf planet located in the Kuiper Belt.
Not "a" Sedna; just "Sedna". Sedna is the Inuit goddess of the sea. Also, a dwarf planet named after this goddess.
Sedna is a small DWARF planet made of ice and rock.
in 2003
Sedna is a dwarf planet. It is to far away to be one of plutos moons and is proved to orbit the sun
Sedna is not a moon of Saturn. It is a dwarf planet that is located in the outer parts of the Solar System. Sedna was discovered in 2003.
No, Sedna is a dwarf planet located in the outer reaches of the solar system and does not have an atmosphere that could support human respiration.
Planet Sedna does not have any rings and as of current scientific observations, it does not have any known moons either. Sedna is a small, icy dwarf planet located in the outer reaches of our solar system, beyond the orbit of Neptune.
Pluto is not a planet. It is considered to be a Dwarf planet like Ceres, Eris, and Sedna.
I honestly don't know for sure what Sedna was made out of. I know that dwarf planets are normally made out of rocky and maybe some icy things too. And as you know, Sedna is a dwarf planet. Iv'e always wondered. Maybe you could look up Sedna off of Wikipedia or you can watch on youtube "the mystery of Sedna." I love space. Hope this helps! ~Emily
Pluto, Sedna, and Quaoar are all solid objects with icy surfaces and are small when compared to the planets of the solar system. Saturn is a giant planet primarily composed of hydrogen and helium. It does not have a solid surface.
The dwarf planet Sedna is believed to have an orbital period of about 11,400 years. It orbits at a distance between 76 and 937 astronomical units.
Minor Planet number 90377 Sedna has never been moved from the asteroid classification. The IAU hasn't received enough data to say it is a dwarf planet because observations to check for things like hydrostatic equilibrium is so difficult for an object in the far out scattered disc section it resides in. Asteroids do not have hydrostatic equilibrium whereas Dwarf Planets do. Sedna may very well qualify as a Dwarf Planet; we just don't know yet.