Yes, there are dwarf planets and other celestial bodies located beyond Eris in the Kuiper Belt, such as Haumea, Makemake, and Quaoar. These objects are part of the trans-Neptunian region of the Solar System, which consists of icy bodies orbiting the Sun beyond the orbit of Neptune.
Of the five currently recognised Dwarf Planets, Eris is the furthest one away from the sun on average. Sedna is an object orbiting much further out, but it has not been confirmed as a dwarf planet, partly as it is unknown at this time if it is near sperical in shape.
Yes there are. As far as I can remember: Eris and Sedna Im sure more will follow.
Most of the time 136199 Eris if further away from the Sun than 134340 Pluto.
No. Sedna is currently classified as a planetoid.
which one? Sedna Quaoar Eris??
Yes. There is proof. The proof is that one whole orbit for Eris is five hundred fifty seven Earth years and one whole orbit for Sedna is ten thousand Earth years.
Yes, there are dwarf planets and other celestial bodies located beyond Eris in the Kuiper Belt, such as Haumea, Makemake, and Quaoar. These objects are part of the trans-Neptunian region of the Solar System, which consists of icy bodies orbiting the Sun beyond the orbit of Neptune.
It is any natural body past the orbit of Neptune. (e.g. Pluto, Eris, Sedna)
Of the five currently recognised Dwarf Planets, Eris is the furthest one away from the sun on average. Sedna is an object orbiting much further out, but it has not been confirmed as a dwarf planet, partly as it is unknown at this time if it is near sperical in shape.
Pluto, Ceres, Eris, Sedna and Makemake are the five "dwarf planets" designated so far. Ceres, Pluto, Haumea, Makemake and Eris are currently the five bodies classed as dwarf planets, but there are further candidates that could be classed as dwarf planets once more information on their shape has been uncovered.
The heliosphere starts right here (or, you might say, at the Sun). Sedna is much further out. However, the heliosphere extends far out beyond Pluto. So the outer boundary of the heliosphere can be beyond Sedna. Sedna has an orbit that is very "eccentric" (highly elliptical). It's distance from the Sun varies greatly as it orbits. So, whether Sedna is inside or outside of the heliosphere changes with time.
Yes there are. As far as I can remember: Eris and Sedna Im sure more will follow.
Pluto is not a planet. It is considered to be a Dwarf planet like Ceres, Eris, and Sedna.
It is a dwarf planet. 136199 Eris is just a large trans-Neptunian object like 136108 Haumea, 50000 Quaoar, 134340 Pluto, 136472 Makemake, 225088 (2007 OR10), 90482 Orcus and 90377 Sedna.
Most of the time 136199 Eris if further away from the Sun than 134340 Pluto.
There are several other dwarf planets in addition to Pluto. These include Eris, Sedna, Quaoar, Orcus, Makemake, Haumea, and the large asteroid Ceres.