Jump To The First Dwarf Planets Dwarf Planets In The Solar System
Our solar system is home to eight planets, over 200 moons, and countless asteroids, comets, and meteors. In addition to these objects, our solar system also contains a multitude of dwarf planets. A dwarf planet is a celestial object whose size and mass are not large enough to be defined as a planet, yet too large to be defined as an asteroid or comet. What are the dwarf planets in our solar system and how many of them are there?
The First Dwarf Planets

Dwarf planets are small and dim, and so it comes as no surprise that they are difficult to detect. Thus, no dwarf planets were discovered after Ceres until the 1930s, when the astronomer Clyde Tombaugh discovered Pluto. Like Ceres, astronomers believed that Pluto was a planet, and for over 50 years, Pluto was believed to be the ninth planet of the solar system. Interestingly, astronomers believed that Pluto was larger than Mercury up until 1978, when astronomers discovered Pluto’s largest moon, Charon. With the discovery of Charon, astronomers were able to calculate the mass of Pluto, revealing that it was noticeably smaller than Mercury. This called into question whether or not Pluto should be considered a planet, yet it continued to be placed alongside the planets until 2006, when the International Astronomical Union defined the criteria for an object to be considered a planet. In order to be a planet, an object must be massive enough to become spherical, it must orbit the sun, and it must have a strong enough gravitational pull to clear its orbit of debris. Pluto met the first two criteria, yet it fails in the third. Pluto, along with several other objects, were reclassified as dwarf planets.
What initially ignited the debate about what it means to be a planet was the discovery of a dwarf planet called Eris, in 2005. Like Pluto, Eris orbits the sun in the far outer regions of the solar system, in an area known as the Kuiper Belt. When Eris was discovered, astronomers realized it was slightly larger than Pluto, yet it was not widely considered to be a planet. If Eris, which is larger than Pluto, was not considered a planet, it called into question whether or not Pluto should be a planet.
Dwarf Planets In The Solar System
