There is no oxygen and there might be frozen water and rock and nitrogen or just methane gas
NO! it is in space and if you do not have no space helmet on you will freeze and have no oxegen so ....... YOU WILL DIE! if you go to the space you see
No because Pluto doesn't have any oxygen.
We don't know. Pluto has only been observed from orbit. But it is definitely possible.
Since there have been no spacecraft probes to fly-by Pluto, and there will not be one until 2015, not much is known about this icy planet. Much of what scientists know are observations made from Charon eclipsing Pluto and Pluto's chance encounter in occulting (covering up) a star. When Pluto occulted a star, a haze was revealed suggesting that Pluto likely has an extremely thin atmosphere. This atmosphere is probably made up of a blend of nitrogen and methane. These elements may exist as a gas when Pluto is closest to the Sun, but would then freeze as Pluto moves further away.
No Earth animal could survive on Pluto; it's cold enough there that for most of the year oxygen is a rock.
no
Thereis no oxygen so no
Pluto has only a very thin atmosphere made of nitrogen with no oxygen. Pluto is also extremely cold.
NO! it is in space and if you do not have no space helmet on you will freeze and have no oxegen so ....... YOU WILL DIE! if you go to the space you see
No because Pluto doesn't have any oxygen.
The freeze.
We don't know. Pluto has only been observed from orbit. But it is definitely possible.
As the atmosphere of Pluto is Methane, If you was suddenly exposed to it yes you would suffocate as there is no Oxygen for you to breathe. Methane by itself is not Toxic to us, but without the presence of Oxygen we cannot breathe.
yes but it is so cold there that it freezes into a solid
Since there have been no spacecraft probes to fly-by Pluto, and there will not be one until 2015, not much is known about this icy planet. Much of what scientists know are observations made from Charon eclipsing Pluto and Pluto's chance encounter in occulting (covering up) a star. When Pluto occulted a star, a haze was revealed suggesting that Pluto likely has an extremely thin atmosphere. This atmosphere is probably made up of a blend of nitrogen and methane. These elements may exist as a gas when Pluto is closest to the Sun, but would then freeze as Pluto moves further away.
No Earth animal could survive on Pluto; it's cold enough there that for most of the year oxygen is a rock.
The density estimates for Pluto indicate that besides rock and frozen gases (oxygen, nitrogen) there is also substantial water ice on Pluto, as is found in comets and on moons.