Yes. Pluto rotates on it's axis in 6d 9h 17m 36s. So nighttime on Pluto during its equinox lasts about 3 days and 5 hours.
Yes. Pluto has a day-night cycle much like the planets do.
-360 to -400 degrees Celsius at night time
Pluto is somewhere around 6 billion kilometers from Earth. 6 billion is less than infinity. Pluto is much closer than any of the stars you see at night, and those are much closer than the other galaxies. On the scale of the universe, Pluto is pretty close.
No. Charon is tidally locked to Pluto such that one side always face toward Pluto and once side always faces away. Since Charon orbits Pluto (or rather the common center of mass between the two) the far side of Charon experiences daylight while it is night on the side facing Pluto.
No. Pluto is a dwarf planet, not a star, and is not visible to the naked eye.
by telloscope
Pluto
Yes. Pluto has a day-night cycle much like the planets do.
Day time on the Moon is hotter than Pluto. Night time on the moon is about as cold as Pluto, sometimes colder.
Black
A day on pluto is ^.$ earth days wich is really 6.4 earth days.
-360 to -400 degrees Celsius at night time
Pluto is too far away for scientists to know much about it. The approx. temperature range for Pluto is -387 degrees F to -370 degrees F .
very cold;54-59degrees kalvin
6.39 Earth days.
The Raven : "Night's Plutonian Shore" .
Pluto is somewhere around 6 billion kilometers from Earth. 6 billion is less than infinity. Pluto is much closer than any of the stars you see at night, and those are much closer than the other galaxies. On the scale of the universe, Pluto is pretty close.