No. Pluto orbits in our solar system.
Planet Pluto is in solar system and Solar system is in the Universe t, hence Pluto is also in our universe.However Pluto was not part of original Solar sytem but was a comet which was captured in a planetary orbit.
pluto
neptune when its orbit inclines with Pluto
because its orbit was highly eccentric and used to intercede the orbit of Neptune. that is why Pluto is no more a part of our solar system as it collided with Neptune and exploded.
Yes because Pluto is no longer in our solar system and the planets after Pluto are not in our solar system
its orbit crosses with another plant
pluto
Planet Pluto is in solar system and Solar system is in the Universe t, hence Pluto is also in our universe.However Pluto was not part of original Solar sytem but was a comet which was captured in a planetary orbit.
pluto
There are many planets further away from Pluto but they do not orbit the sun so they are not part of our solar system. There are also many stars that are further away from Pluto.
neptune when its orbit inclines with Pluto
because its orbit was highly eccentric and used to intercede the orbit of Neptune. that is why Pluto is no more a part of our solar system as it collided with Neptune and exploded.
Neptune's place in orbit is relatively after Uranus's orbit. It being the eighth and final planet in our solar system (Pluto is not a planet), Neptune crosses with Pluto in the orbit making it the ninth planet until Pluto was kicked out.
Yes because Pluto is no longer in our solar system and the planets after Pluto are not in our solar system
It is not the dominant object in the neighbourhood of its orbit.
Pluto's orbit is near the beginning of the Kuiper belt.
No, in fact it has the most elongated and tilted orbit in the whole solar system