No. On July 14, 2015, the New Horizons Spacecraft flew 12,500 km (7,800 mi) above the surface of Pluto, making it the first spacecraft to explore the dwarf planet. But it didn't land.
On October 25, 2016, the last of the recorded data from the Pluto flyby was received from New Horizons. Having completed its flyby of Pluto, New Horizons has maneuvered for a flyby of Kuiper belt object (486958) 2014 MU69, expected to take place on January 1, 2019, when it will be 43.4 AU from the Sun.
no it is not
pluto.... it spins clockwise...
Yes. Pluto is at the inner edge of the Kuiper belt, which contains millions of comets and a number of Pluto-like objects.
Yes. Because of its orbit Neptune and Pluto switch places every 20 years.
No astronaut has ever reached Pluto before.
a lot
No
Pluto is relatively small as planets go; it is officially categorized as a dwarf planet.
The dwarf planet Pluto has never gone missing. It's still there.
Plutonium doesn't occur in nature as far as we know, but if Pluto were made of solid Plutonium, nothing would happen. Pluto is not near anything that might be affected.
Anything that has mass has gravity. Pluto, which has a mass of 0.0125x1024kg, has a force of gravity that is equal to 0.58m/s2 - a value that is about 6% that of the gravity on Earth.
Pluto is not a moon of anything; it is a dwarf planet. Scientists used to think that Pluto may have once been a moon of Neptune, but later studies showed that it could not be so due to the nature of Pluto's orbit.