From the sun 4.6 Billion Kilometers away ;)
Yes. Pluto gets light from the sun, but far less than Earth does.
it reflects light because pluto is made of ice so its cant make like its reflects its. it gets light from the sun
The dwarf planet Pluto is very far from the sun and gets almost no light or heat from the sun; it is extremely cold. It has no atmosphere.
When observing Pluto from a distance of 5.91 trillion miles (5910000000000 miles), you would be looking at Pluto as it was about 4 hours and 4 minutes ago. This is because the speed of light is finite and it takes time for the light from Pluto to reach the telescope on Earth.
no Pluto reflects light from the sun
Pluto is cold and dark, In Fact it is so cold that it could freeze some of the gasses that are on Earth. It gets 250 times the light that the moon gives when it is a full moon.
below zero
Pluto has no light, and thus never "got it". It does however radiate photons in a very low frequency (not visible) in accordance to the theory of black body radiation. If you meant, "why can we see Pluto in the visible light spectrum?" then the answers is simply that the light was reflected from the sun.
No. The stars of the constellations are many light yearsfrom Earth. Pluto is only about 5½ light hours from Earth.
Pluto reflects sunlight rather than emitting its light due to its distance from the Sun. As an icy dwarf planet, Pluto's surface is highly reflective, with a low albedo that causes it to appear bright in our solar system.
the one that gets you sick from pluto
Pluto is mickey's pet, Goofy is not