Eris

Artist's impression of the distant object Eris
© NASA
Although we cannot yet be sure, we think that Eris is a rocky/icy object about one and a half times the size of Pluto.
Following its discovery there was debate amongst other astronomers as to whether the new object could be called a planet, and this discussion eventually led to Pluto being de-classified as a proper planet in 2006, 76 years after it was first discovered.
The problem is that Eris's orbit is highly inclined or tilted (44°) to the orbits of the other planets in the solar system - as is Pluto's, which also has an inclined orbit (17°). This suggests that the object did not form in the same way as the planets and is simply a large lump of rock that was somehow captured into its highly eccentric 557 year orbit around the Sun.
Eris is now officially referred to as a plutoid. These are dwarf planets that circle the Sun beyond the orbit of Neptune.
| Facts and Figures | |
| Average Orbit | 10,120,000,000 km from the Sun or 67.67 AU |
| Orbital Inclination | 44 °C |
| Radius | 1300 km |
| Mass | 1.7 x 1022 kg or 0.003 Earths |
| Length of Year | 557 Earth years |
| Length of Day | Unknown |
| Surface Gravity | 0.08 g |
| Surface Temperature | about -230 °C |
