No it could not most stars burn helium and hydrogen to give light and heat neutron stars are made of only neutrons and gives off little light and the gravity is extremely high compared to a normal star if a earth like planet orbited a neutron star the stars gravity well ( is the pull of gravity that a large body in space exerts. The larger the body (the more mass) the greater the gravity well it has. The Sun has a large (or deep) gravity well) then its gravity well would most likely pull earth into the neutron star so fast and so hard it would smash the planet apart
Every solid mass has gravity but it takes a really big object like a planet to have a noticable amount. Most asteroids are very small but they do have gravity and can affect any objects that come too close.
Yes, technically there is gravity on all objects. But depending on the size of the asteroid it is normally only a very small amount.
At the temperatures expected on Pluto, water is a rock. So it doesn't have the ability to support life of any kind that we're familiar with.
No one really knows when we will be able to live on Pluto. It will be a mystery. But we could survive if it had heat.
No. Asteroids are airless and have no protection from solar radiation.
no one knows
Yes.
no
No. Pluto is too cold to support life.
No, Pluto cannot support life on earth as it is much too far from the sun, or any star. It is too cold. Also, it is mostly made of ice, so if it was hot enough, it would melt apart.
No, its the furthest planet away from the sun (that means its so cold you can die), and the earth is the only planet that has human, or plant life on it. And Pluto doesn't have an atmosphere like the earth does.
No. The only planet available to support life is planet earth. Pluto is on average at least -50 degrees.
because it can
No because it is way too cold.
No. Pluto is too cold to support life.
If you are asking if Pluto can support human life, the answer is no. No planet or dwarf planet in our solar system can support human life except Earth.
There is air but the atmosphere does not support human life.
No. Earth is the only known world to support life.
No. The only world known to support life is Earth.
It is very unlikely. Earth is the only known world to support life. We no relatively little about the surface of Pluto, but it is probably too cold to support any sort of life.
No. Comets are too cold to support life.
No
Everything necessary to support human life.
You breathe in the mixture provided in your life support suit. That, or die.
Very doubtful as it is too cold to support what we consider life to be.