Ceres (é-he̍k-chheⁿ)

sió-he̍k-chheⁿ From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ceres (é-he̍k-chheⁿ)
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1 Ceres (hû-hō: ⚳)[17] sī 1 lia̍p tiàm tī sió-he̍k-chheⁿ-toà ê é-he̍k-chheⁿ, hoat-hiān-jîn sī Giuseppe Piazzi, tī 1801 nî. CeresLô-má cha-bó͘ sîn-bêng ê miâ.

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Phēng toā-sè: 4 Vesta, 1 Ceres (tiong-ng), Goe̍h-niû

19 sè-kí chhím hoat-hiān ê sî, lâng lia̍h-chún i hām kî-thaⁿ ê he̍k-chheⁿ sio siâng, só͘-í kā i tòng-chò 1 lia̍p he̍k-chheⁿ. Boé--á khah liáu-kái i ê sèng-chit liáu-aū, tō kā lia̍t chò sió-he̍k-chheⁿ. Sui-bóng 1 Ceres ti̍t-kèng chiah 950 km, i si̍t-chāi sī Thài-iông-hē 13 bān lia̍p sió-he̍k-chheⁿ tang-tiong, siōng kài toā lia̍p, chit-liōng siōng chē, hêng siōng îⁿ ê 1 lia̍p, ē-sái kóng sió-he̍k-chheⁿ-toà ū 3-hūn-1 ê chit-liōng tī i hia. In-ūi án-ne, 2006 nî 8 goe̍h thian-bûn-ha̍k-kài koh kā i kái lia̍t chò 1 lia̍p "é-he̍k-chheⁿ".

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Tsù-sik

  1. The value given for Ceres is the mean moment of inertia, which is thought to better represent its interior structure than the polar moment of inertia, due to its high polar flattening.[8]

Tsù-kái

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