7,000,000,000-4,400,000
Old the planets are. Billions of years old are all of them.
Exactly the same as they are now.
No. Pluto's not a planet. Its a big piece of rock that does'nt orbit like the other planets.
They all do. Some planets are closer to a circular orbit than others (have a lower eccentricity), but none are exactly circular.
There are no planets that we know of that are exactly the same size.
None of them. The only planets with rings are the four outer gas planets, none of them have 15 moons exactly.
Yes, none of the planets in our solar system have exactly circular orbits, though some are more eccentric than others.
Nothing in the positions of the planets affects humans. There is no proven connection between planetary activity and any individual's life.
Dwarf planets are celestial bodies that have enough mass to have a gravitational pull by the sun, but they are not large enough to be considered a regular planet. They are also too big to be satellites. Minor planets are in direct orbit with the sun. They are not dominant planets, and they are not comets. This qualifies all dwarf planets as minor planets. So, to answer your question, not exactly. All dwarf planets are minor planets. But not all minor planets are dwarf planets. Hope this helps you!!
None of the planets in our solar system has exactly 17 known moons.
10 years old
It can help us understand exactly why the Earth is fit to support life, while the planets we are capable of seeing are not.