no
No, you wouldn't be able to see the curve of Pluto from its surface. Pluto's gravity is much weaker than Earth's, so the surface would appear relatively flat to an observer standing on it.
yes
In volume, 0.0059 Earths. See related link.
Yes, but it will be much dimmer than it is from Earth. Pluto varies between about 30 to 50 times farther away from the Sun than the Earth is, which would make the Sun between 900 and 2500 times dimmer on Pluto.
This is impossible to tell from this distance but probably not. A space craft is due to fly past Pluto in 2015 if Pluto's moon has rings then we will be able to see them.
They were able to see it through a powerful telescope.
Smallest to largest - Pluto, Earth, Saturn, Jupiter.
No answer Pluto orbits the Sun Pluto does not orbit the Earth
No, Pluto is much colder than the Earth.
To find your weight on Pluto, you can use the formula: weight on Pluto = (weight on Earth) × (gravity of Pluto / gravity of Earth). The gravity on Pluto is about 0.067 times that of Earth. For example, if you weigh 150 pounds on Earth, you would weigh approximately 10.05 pounds on Pluto. Simply multiply your Earth weight by 0.067 to get your weight on Pluto.
You weigh more on Earth than on Pluto because Earth has a higher gravitational pull than Pluto does.
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.