Pluton est à la droite de Neptune (Pluto is right TO Neptune), or Pluton est près de Neptune (Pluto is right next to Neptune)
In French, Neptune is spelled the same way as in English but pronounced as "nep-tune."
In the solar system, that planet is Neptune. Actually no, it's Pluto. Lying in what is known as the Kuiper Belt, it is 7.4 billion km away from the Sun at it's furthest point of orbit, and was discovered in 1930 by the astronomer Clyde W. Tombaugh. So, is the right answer "Neptune" or "Pluto"? I say it's Neptune because Pluto was "demoted" to "dwarf planet" status in 2006. Pluto is not considered a true planet now by most astronomers.
Neptune or Uranus is the coldest Planet. Some reference sources say it's Neptune others say it's Uranus. There's very little difference between them. Neptune is the furthest from the Sun, but it has an internal heat source.
Pluto and Neptune are the brothers of Jupiter.
With Pluto now regarded as a dwarf planet, the answer is Neptune. There are times when Pluto's orbit takes it inside Neptune for about 20 years at a time out of its 248 year orbit, as it did from 1979 to 1999. So even when Pluto was considered a planet, it wasn't always the furthest away from the Sun.
Some say that Pluto was originally a tiny satellite of Neptune, when a large comet hit it with such tremendous force that it caused little Pluto to be knocked out of orbit and become considerably larger. The fragments became Pluto's moons which are known as Nix, Hydra, and the largest, Charon.
Ahh let's see. Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and dare i say Pluto? So; Number 4 from the Sun...
Despite the fact that Pluto and Neptune temporarily change places in their distance from the Sun, they will never collide. This is due to two reasons: First, Pluto's orbit is inclined to the ecliptic by 17 degrees. So even though we say their orbits "cross," Pluto is actually quite a distance "above" Neptune. Secondly, Pluto orbits the Sun twice for every three orbits of Neptune. The two planets are said to be in a "resonance orbit." For such orbits, the two bodies never get close to each other. In fact, the closest the two planets come to each other is 2 billion kilometers.
Since Pluto is now a dwarf planet, the last planet is now Neptune. The most recent planetary discovery occurred in 1930; the newly discovered body was named "Pluto". Since then, it has completed about 1/3rd of a revolution in its orbit around the sun. Nobody can say with certainty that Pluto is the 'last' planet, only that it is the one most recently discovered, the one at the largest known average distance from the sun, and the one with the longest known orbital period. So far....
It's an outer planet, as it is the eighth planet away from the sun. You could say it is the last planet if you exclude Pluto.
Neptune is the eighth planet from the Sun. You may say it is the last planet if you exclude Pluto.
Of the presently known planets, Uranus and Neptune are farthest from the sun.Uranus, NeptuneOr maybe better to say "Neptune, Uranus" in that order as Neptune is further away than Uranus.