no it is a frozen place that is -230 celsius. unless you are dead then no.
Charon. It's more of a satellite than a planet, unless you want to consider Pluto/Charon as a double planet. That's a little awkward, since Pluto has been downgraded to a planetoid.
yes if they want
You mean in OUR solar system. lol. Mercury is now the smallest because Pluto isn't considered a planet anymore.
pluto isn`t currently consider as a planet today because in 2006 scinctist decided that pluto is too tiny to be planet and it has a weird orbit and it also isn`t that round to be a planet.But I still want it to be planet but what can i do anyway
mars =D
Pluto was a planet but they didnt want it to be a planet anymore because it was so tiny. But Pluto is alot smaller than earth.
Pluto is a dwarf planet that is supposed to be no longer a planet (It is still considered a planet because of its history in the solar system. Some astronomers want to prove that Pluto is still a planet even though it is more likely known as an asteroid). It is the planet farthest from the sun.
Pluto is considered to be two different things. 1. Pluto is a dwarf planet. It is in hydrostatic equilibrium (round) and it orbits the sun, but it has not cleared its neighborhood of debris. What's its neighborhood? The Kuiper belt, a collection of icy objects similar to comets that somewhat resembles the asteroid belt. This leads to its second classification. 2. Pluto is a Kuiper Belt Object (KBO). Specifically, it's classified as a plutino - an object within a certain zone of the Kuiper Belt.
some people are sick of society, or want something new, or both
It is possible but you wouldn't want to live there.
The word "planet" has been divided into two newer concepts: major planets and dwarf planets.The definition of major planet excludes Pluto because a major planet must have cleared its orbit of asteroids, comets, and other debris. Pluto is a part of the Kuiper belt, and has not absorbed most of the cometary bodies into itself, or captured them as satellites. Pluto is therefore a dwarf planet.The rules of a planet are:It orbits a star or the remnants of a starIt is large enough for gravity to squash it into a sphere-like shapeIt must have cleared its orbitPluto's orbit has many icy bodies in its path, most of them in the Kuiper Belt where Pluto spends most of its time.The definition of planet was changed in 2006 by the International Astronomical Union (IAU). As a dwarf planet Pluto is in the same category as Eris (which is bigger than Pluto), Ceres (king of the asteroids), and possibly other bodies being discovered in the Kuiper Belt.
Yes, there's Mercury and Venus and Mars and Jupiter and Saturn and Neptune and Pluto. Pluto is a dwarf planet. The eight regular planets of the solar system are Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune.