Makemakian
Makemake is a dwarf planet in our solar system and it has a surface gravity that is approximately 0.5% of Earth's gravity. This means that an object on Makemake would weigh much less compared to Earth.
Makemake is one of the dwarf planets in the Kuiper Belt, and it takes about 305.5 Earth years to complete one orbit around the Sun. If a 12-year-old were on Makemake, they would still be 12 years old in Earth years, but in terms of Makemake years, they would be just a tiny fraction of a year old—approximately 0.039 of a year, since 12 Earth years is only a small part of Makemake's lengthy orbital period.
No. Makemake was discovered too recently for us to have sent anything there. It takes years to plan such a mission and would take years for a probe to visit something as far away as Makemake. The most distant object we have visited so far is Pluto.
It seems like there may be a typo in your question, as "makemake" typically refers to a dwarf planet in our solar system. Assuming you are asking how many dwarf planets like Makemake could fit inside Earth, the answer would depend on the size of the dwarf planet in question. Earth has a diameter of about 12,742 kilometers, while Makemake has a diameter of about 1,430 kilometers. Therefore, roughly 9 Makemake-sized dwarf planets could fit along the diameter of Earth.
If you waited until Makemake was at the closest point in its orbit, it would still be about 5,609,925,000 kilometers away. At 90 kilometers per hour, that would be 62,332,500 hours, or 7111 years.
Martian
Venusian
Ioians ioains ions
Caspians
Europans, although they might confuse them with Europeans
I guess the scientists would come up with a name. Though 'Mercurians' seem OK
Yes. A moon was recently discovered in orbit around Makemake, so it would occasionally eclipse Makemake itself.
The gravity on Makemake is not currently known. No one knows how heavy someone would weigh there.
Makemake is a dwarf planet in our solar system and it has a surface gravity that is approximately 0.5% of Earth's gravity. This means that an object on Makemake would weigh much less compared to Earth.
Moors were medieval Muslim inhabitants of Northwest Africa. This is not a nationality available to living persons. Any attempt to claim "Moorish" as a nationality would be frivolous and unavailing.
Deimos, one of the two TINY moons of Mars, is far too small for anyone to live ON it. If any people ever settle the place, they will burrow inside and live IN it. Their nationality? Depends on who goes there. At the current pace, probably Chinese.
Minnesota is a state in the United States, so its "nationality" would be American.