No, it is not.
Pluto mars Jupiter
Pluto is known as a dwarf planet cause it's orbit isn't cleared, which is a rule required to be a planet.
Probably not, considering the money required to do such a thing.
The area covered by the reach of the boom and arm of the excavator is called the digging envelope. The depth to which the tip of the bucket teeth can reach below the machine tracks to remove a bucketful of dirt is the digging depth. The deeper the hole the longer the reach required.
Type your answer here... I AM A DWARF AND I AM DIGGING A HOLE! DIGGING DIGGING HOLE! DIGGING DIGGING HOLE! HOLE HOLE, DIGGING DIGGING HOLE! DIGGING DIGGING HOLE! DIGGING DIGGING HOLE! HOLE HOLE, DIGGING DIGGING HOLE!
Pluto can be seen with an amateur telescope but it is not easy and you will require a great deal of supporting information on how to locate it. Something like the Hubble Space Telescope would be required to see Pluto's moons, and then, not in any great detail.
According to those who do not accept the IAU's judgement on such matters - and no one is required to - Pluto. While Pluto was declared by the IAU to no longer be a planet, many disagreed. They had - and have - that right.
According to those who do not accept the IAU's judgement on such matters - and no one is required to - Pluto. While Pluto was declared by the IAU to no longer be a planet, many disagreed. They had - and have - that right.
The time required to travel to Pluto depends on the spacecraft's speed and trajectory. For New Horizons, the fastest spacecraft to reach Pluto, it took approximately 9.5 years to travel the 3 billion miles from Earth to Pluto. Other spacecraft with different speeds and trajectories would take longer.
Pluto, it is now a dwarf planet or planetoid.
From the New Horizons mission guide: Science Priorities Based largely on what the scientific community wanted to learn about Pluto and Charon, NASA prioritized its science goals for Pluto-system exploration in three categories: Required • Characterize the global geology and morphology of Pluto and Charon • Map surface composition of Pluto and Charon • Characterize the neutral atmosphere of Pluto and its escape rate Important • Characterize the time variability of Pluto's surface and atmosphere • Image Pluto and Charon in stereo • Map the terminators (day/night lines) of Pluto and Charon in high resolution • Map the composition of selected areas of Pluto and Charon at high resolution • Characterize Pluto's ionosphere and solar wind interaction • Search for neutral species (including hydrocarbons and nitriles) in Pluto's upper atmosphere • Search for an atmosphere around Charon • Determine bolometric bond albedos for Pluto and Charon • Map the surface temperatures on Pluto and Charon Desired • Characterize the energetic particle environment of Pluto and Charon • Refine bulk parameters (radii, masses, densities) and orbits of Pluto and Charon • Search for magnetic fields of Pluto and Charon • Search for additional satellites and rings NASA defines mission success as meeting the "required" objectives. With its full science payload -- three optical instruments, two plasma instruments, a radio science receiver/radiometer and a dust sensor - New Horizons expects to exceed these requirements, meeting or addressing all of the objectives in each category.
Carl.......Just kidding its PLUTO