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No. If Pluto was ever blown up it would make breakignews everywhere and chunks of it would hit the Earth and kill us all. ==D----------------------
Only robotic probes have been in the vicinity of Pluto; human beings have not travelled any farther than the moon.
No, Pluto has not been sucked up by a black hole. Pluto is a dwarf planet located in our solar system, while black holes are distant cosmic phenomena with intense gravitational pull. Pluto orbits the Sun and is not at risk of being sucked up by a black hole.
One space probe has been sent to Pluto: NASA's New Horizons spacecraft. It performed a flyby of Pluto in July 2015, providing the first close-up images and scientific data of the dwarf planet and its moons.
Pluto is the only planet in the solar system that has not been explored with a spacecraft. What is know about the dark, frozen world is the result of many years of work by scientists. It is thought that Pluto is made up of a mixture of rocks and several kinds of "ices". Scientists believe that most of the ices that make up Pluto are frozen methane and ammonia.
Pluto did not disintegrate. It is still there. The only thing that has changed is a new formal definition of a planet, and Pluto did not make the cut.
None, yet. The New Horizons mission (a scientific probe) is on its way to Pluto. It crossed the orbit of Saturn on about 08 June 2008. It will reach Pluto in the year 2015. None, yet.
Pluto is made up of ice
Actually yes, there have been over 70,000 objects that measure 100 km in diameter found to be just like Pluto that now make up the Kuiper Belt. Only one object has been found larger than Pluto, but it has an even more erratic orbit than Pluto. So yes there are many others!
No, if a bearded goat dies, Pluto will NOT blow up. Pluto will not blow up unless a massive chemical reaction goes on in Pluto's core, or if humans manage to find a way to stash billions of pounds of dynamite all over Pluto. Other than that, Pluto will not blow up under any other circumstances.
Yes. Pluto is made up of nitrogen and methane
Pluto's interior is thought to be rocky with a possible core made of metal. It likely contains a mantle of water ice and a surface covered in nitrogen ice and other frozen substances. Its exact composition is not yet known, as no spacecraft has landed on or orbited Pluto for a close-up study of its interior.