Ceres$1$ - traducción al francés
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Ceres$1$ - traducción al francés

DWARF PLANET IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM AND LARGEST ASTEROID OF THE MAIN ASTEROID BELT
Asteroid Ceres; Cerera; 1 ceres asteroid; (1) Ceres; Ceres (astronomy); Ceres Ferdinandea; Ceres (asteroid); Ceres asteroid; A899 OF; 1943 XB; Ceres (planet); 1 ceres; 1 Ceres (dwarf planet); 1 Ceres (planetoid); Ceres (planetoid); Ceres 1; 1 Ceres; Dwarf planet Ceres; Planet Ceres; Ceres (dwarf-planet); Exploration of Ceres; Discovery of Ceres; Ceres (DP); Atmosphere of Ceres; Minor Planet Ceres; A801 AA; Ceres (protoplanet); Atmosphere of 1 Ceres; Atmosphere of (1) Ceres; Exploration of (1) Ceres; Exploration of 1 Ceres; Discovery of 1 Ceres; Discovery of (1) Ceres; Cererian atmosphere; Ceres (minor planet); Ceres’s atmosphere; 1 Ceres’s Atmosphere; (1) Ceres’s atmosphere; (1) A801 AA; (1) A899 OF; Life on Ceres; MP Ceres
  • Ceres}}
  • 12px
  • Orbits of Ceres (red, inclined) along with Jupiter and the inner planets (white and grey). The upper diagram shows Ceres's orbit from top down. The bottom diagram is a side view showing Ceres's orbital inclination to the [[ecliptic]]. Lighter shades indicate above the ecliptic; darker indicate below.
  • An enhanced Hubble image of Ceres, the best acquired by a telescope, taken in 2004
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  • ''Dawn'' spacecraft]]
  • Hydrogen concentration (blue) in the upper metre of the regolith indicating presence of water ice
  • website=NASA}}</ref> "Ysolo Mons" has been renamed "Yamor Mons."<ref name="ysolo" />
  • "Mantle" (hydrated rock)}}
  • Permanently shadowed regions capable of accumulating surface ice

Ceres      
Ceres, town in central California (USA)

Definición

Ceres
·noun The first discovered asteroid.
II. Ceres ·noun The daughter of Saturn and Ops or Rhea, the goddess of corn and tillage.

Wikipedia

Ceres (dwarf planet)

Ceres (pronounced , SEER-eez), minor-planet designation 1 Ceres, is a dwarf planet in the asteroid belt between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. It was the first asteroid discovered, on 1 January 1801, by Giuseppe Piazzi at Palermo Astronomical Observatory in Sicily and announced as a new planet. Ceres was later classified as an asteroid and then a dwarf planet – the only dwarf planet orbiting entirely within Neptune's orbit.

Ceres's small size means that even at its brightest, it is too dim to be seen by the naked eye, except under extremely dark skies. Its apparent magnitude ranges from 6.7 to 9.3, peaking at opposition (when it is closest to Earth) once every 15- to 16-month synodic period. As a result, its surface features are barely visible even with the most powerful telescopes, and little was known about it until the robotic NASA spacecraft Dawn approached Ceres for its orbital mission in 2015.

Dawn found Ceres's surface to be a mixture of water ice, and hydrated minerals such as carbonates and clay. Gravity data suggest Ceres to be partially differentiated into a muddy (ice-rock) mantle/core and a less dense but stronger crust that is at most 30% ice by volume. Although Ceres likely lacks an internal ocean of liquid water, brines still flow through the outer mantle and reach the surface, allowing cryovolcanoes such as Ahuna Mons to form roughly every fifty million years. This makes Ceres the closest known cryovolcanic body to the Sun, and the brines provide a potential habitat for microbial life.

In January 2014, emissions of water vapour were detected around Ceres, creating a tenuous, transient atmosphere known as an exosphere. This was unexpected because vapour is usually a hallmark of comets, not asteroids.