No. There are almost no astronomers that think Pluto is a planet. They know it's officially a dwarf planet.
No, not all astronomers consider Pluto a planet. Pluto was reclassified as a dwarf planet in 2006 by the International Astronomical Union, leading to debate among scientists about its classification. Some astronomers argue that Pluto does not meet all the criteria to be considered a full planet.
No. Most follow the new IAU definition of a planet which excludes Pluto.
no
The meeting of astronomers at the International Astronomical Union (IAU) where Pluto was redefined and classified as a "dwarf planet" took place in August 2006. During this meeting, the IAU established new criteria for what constitutes a planet, leading to the conclusion that Pluto did not meet all the necessary requirements due to its size and other factors.
I think you mean "Pluto" not "luto". Yes, Pluto is a Plutoid. It's the example that all the Plutoids are named after.
All astronomers are scientists.All astronomers are scientists.All astronomers are scientists.All astronomers are scientists.
The discovery of other similar objects to Pluto in more recent years has meant that astronomers either had to keep adding planets to the list, or we had to redefine what a planet actually was. In 2006, a new definition for a planet was established. It had to be approximately round, it had to orbit the sun and it had to have cleared its neighbourhood of all other objects - so that at that distance from the sun, there were no other sizable bodies. Pluto is not large enough to have done the latter, while all other remaining planets have, so it was downgraded to a dwarf planet. There are now eight planets recognised and five Dawrf planets, of which Pluto is one.
I think the Aliens were preparing an army on Pluto all that time, Now they came back and they will attack earth. LOL
No, one cannot be sure.
no, because Pluto the dwarf planet is out of order so it would be no.I think... >.>
no Pluto dose not have clouds because of the atmosphere .
The discovery of other similar objects to Pluto in more recent years has meant that astronomers either had to keep adding planets to the list, or we had to redefine what a planet actually was. In 2006, a new definition for a planet was established. It had to be approximately round, it had to orbit the sun and it had to have cleared its neighbourhood of all other objects - so that at that distance from the sun, there were no other sizable bodies. Pluto is not large enough to have done the latter, while all other remaining planets have, so it was downgraded to a dwarf planet. There are now eight planets recognised and five Dawrf planets, of which Pluto is one.