A day on Pluto is 6.4 Earth days, which is 153.3 hours, or 9,198 minutes long.
Pluto rotates much more slowly than Earth so a day on Pluto is much longer than a day on Earth. A day on Pluto is 6.4 Earth days or 153.3 hours long.
to get from Earth to Pluto it will take 3600 days.
It takes about 50 years from earth to Pluto
Pluto has four known moons, four times as many as the Earth.
Earth's gravity is 16 times the gravity of Pluto.
Pluto orbits the Sun in 14,164.4 Pluto days (90,613.305 Earth days, or 248.03 Earth years).
To get from Earth to Pluto it takes 5763 km to get their.
Pluto does not make a full rotation in an Earth day. In one Earth day, pluto has only rotated about 15% of the way.A full rotation on Pluto is about 6.4 Earth days.
Pluto isn't larger then earth in fact you can fit 4 plutos in earth
Earth an pluto
The sidereal rotation period of Pluto is about 6.39 Earth days.Therefore, 31 Plutonian days is equal to (31 * 6.39) = 198.09 Earth days.Also note that 31 Earth days would be equal to (31 / 6.39) = 4.85 Plutonian days.
One "day" on Pluto (one rotation around its axis) is roughly 6.4 Earth days. A year (one orbit around the Sun) is about 248.09 Earth years. Pluto's sidereal rotation period is 6 days, 9 hours, 17 minutes, and 36 seconds. So about 6.4 Earth days is the rotation period (sidereal day). However, Pluto has a very large axis tilt (120 degrees) compared to the plane of its rotation. That means the polar regions are facing (fairly) directly towards or away from the Sun at times during Pluto's long orbit. So, for long periods, there will be a big difference in the amount of daylight in the northern and southern hemispheres. In practical terms, that means most of Pluto gets either daylight or night lasting for many Earth years at a time. And the brightest it ever gets there is about comparable to dusk on Earth.