Quiet unlikely. The size of Pluto is quite small, so if it had another moon, it would be very visible and not likely to be missed, unless it was smaller than we could notice, in which case it would not be classified as a moon.
No, the latest estimates are 5 moons for Pluto and over 60 each for Jupiter and Saturn.
Before many people thought it was but Uranus' moons titan and supposedly Pluto bumped into each other and Pluto found another orbit around the sun and stayed there.
Pluto orbits the sun along with the other dwarf planets.
Yes, and they do. Not all of them have confirmed moons but some do. Pluto, for example, has four known moons.
There is no such planet. Charon is the name of one of the moons of Pluto. Pluto has four other moons in addition to Charon, but they were not discovered until much later. Additionally, as of 2006 Pluto is no longer considered a planet.
Pluto isn't a planet.... so i guess it kinda doesnt matter
No, it is not true that Pluto has 7 satellites. Pluto actually has five known satellites which are Charon, Styx, Nix, Kerberos, and Hydra.
Pluto has 3 moons. It's most common one is Charon. The other 2 are Nix and Hydra. Those are really small and orbit a little farther.
Charon orbits once every time Pluto rotates once. Other moons(including ours)don't do that.
Charon orbits once every time Pluto rotates once. Other moons(including ours)don't do that.
Charon is the closest moon to Pluto. It is large in comparison to Pluto, with a diameter over half that of Pluto's size, and the two bodies are tidally locked, meaning they always show the same face to each other.
As of 2012, it was up to 5 moons - S/2012 (134340)1, or P5, was given the name Styx. Pluto and Charon may have formed due to a large collision between two protoplanets, which also created the other 4 small moons of Pluto, which gradually drifted farther from the planet.