Ví dụ về việc sử dụng Makemake trong Tiếng anh và bản dịch của chúng sang Tiếng việt
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Makemake could have been discovered earlier.
Erisand its moon, Dysnomia; and Makemake.
Makemake was formally classified as plutoid in July 2008.
Examples are 1992 QB1, 50000 Quaoar and Makemake.
Makemake is the brightest object in the Kuiper belt after Pluto.
Encompasses the dwarf planets Pluto, Haumea and Makemake.
The trans-Neptunian dwarf planet Makemake is named after this creator deity.
Makemake, co-discovered with Brown and Rabinowitz in 2005, one of the first 5 official dwarf planets.[8].
The Hubble discovery images suggest that MK 2 is as dark as charcoal,which seems surprising given that Makemake is so bright.
Dwarf planet Makemake is such a borderline classical cubewano/scatnear object.
A looping, elliptical orbit, on the other hand, would suggest that MK 2 wasonce a free-flying Kuiper Belt object that Makemake captured.
Occultations are particularly uncommon in the case of Makemake, because it moves in an area of the sky with relatively few stars.
If the orbit is elliptical, looping it might suggest that MK 2 could havebeen an independent object in the Kuiper Belt that Makemake captured.
This tells us that Makemake lacks an atmosphere and it must be colder than we expected, even colder the North Pole in winter!
Until a few years ago, Pluto was considered to be the most distant planet in our Solar System,until it was downgraded to a dwarf planet like Makemake.
In 2006 Pluto, Eris, Haumea, Makemake, and(in the inner Solar System) the asteroid Ceres were reclassified as dwarf planets.[4].
The moon was spotted by a team using the Keck telescopes in Hawaii,who were busy carrying out observations of the four brightest TNOs(Pluto, Makemake, Haumea, and Eris) at the time.
Makemake was discovered on March 31st 2005 and was recognized as a dwarf planet by the International Astronomical Union(IAU) in July 2008.
Ceres is the largest body in the asteroid belt, while Pluto,Haumea, and Makemake are members of the Kuiper belt and Eris is a member of the scattered disc.
Makemake orbits the sun at an average distance of 45.7 astronomical units(AU) and completes one lap around the star every 309 Earth years.
And the centaurs and trans-Neptunian objects, with the exception of the dwarf planets Pluto,Haumea, Makemake, and Eris and others that may turn out to be dwarf planets.
Makemake was discovered on March 31, 2005, by a team at the Palomar Observatory, led by Michael Brown,[3] and was announced to the public on July 29, 2005.
MK 2 was spotted in observations made by Hubble's Wide Field Camera 3 in April 2015,after several previous Makemake observation campaigns had failed to turn up any satellites.
The team's new observations add much moredetail to our view of Makemake-- determining its size more accurately, putting constraints on a possible atmosphere and estimating the dwarf planet's density for the first time.
Quaoar is the largest body that is classified as a cubewano, or classical Kuiper belt object, by both the Minor Planet Center[5]and the Deep Ecliptic Survey(although the dwarf planet Makemake, which is larger, is also classified as a cubewano).
Bodies which fulfill the first two conditions butnot the third(such as Pluto, Makemake and Eris) are classified as dwarf planets, provided they are not also natural satellites of other planets.
Thus SSSBs are: the comets; the classical asteroids, with the exception of the dwarf planet Ceres; the trojans; and the centaurs and trans-Neptunian objects, with the exception of the dwarf planets Pluto,Haumea, Makemake, and Eris and others that may turn out to be dwarf planets.
Haumea(43.34 AU average), and Makemake(45.79 AU average), while smaller than Pluto, are the largest known objects in the classical Kuiper belt(that is, they are not in a confirmed resonance with Neptune).
For example, further observations of the moon- which has been provisionally named S/2015(136472) 1, and nicknamed MK 2-should allow astronomers to calculate the density of Makemake, which should tell them if the dwarf planet and Pluto are made of similar stuff.
On June 11, 2008, theInternational Astronomical Union(IAU) included Makemake in its list of potential candidates to be given"plutoid" status, a term for dwarf planets beyond the orbit of Neptune that would place the object alongside Pluto, Haumea and Eris.