No, it is a normal orbit with an average radius of 30.06 astronomical units.
Apart from Venus Neptune has the most nearly circular orbit, and those two planets are the only ones with an eccentricity factor less than 0.01.
Neptune has a moon that revolves in the direction opposite all its other moons. This moon is called Triton and is the largest moon of Neptune.
There are multiple reasons but to start off i will list the main ones. Pluto DOESNT/HASNT cleared it orbit. this simply means other objects are in its way...for instance every [pluto] year it passes in through neptunes orbit. Also it i very small compared to any of the other planets. then finally it is neither a gaseous planet nor terrestrial it resembles more of a commet.
Well it orbits just the way any other planet does
U answer
it orbit's clock wise
Yes it does orbit that way.
1. Pluto doesn't orbit the same way as the other planets in a horizontal orbit it has a diagonal orbit
No. The plane of any satellite orbit has to include the center of the earth, so the ground-track of the orbit would be great circle on the earth if the planet didn't rotate. Another way to visualize it: For every point in a satellite orbit that's north of the equator, there has to be a point south of the equator. (Technically, this is only true for circular orbits, but conceptually it's a good way to get the point across.)
Pluto, and all of the planets orbit the sun. Not the other way around.
Items that orbit the Sun are satilites, rocks and other planets in the Milky Way.
John Glenn.(We're almost certain that he was the first American to orbit the earth in anything,since we can't think of any other way to do it other than in a space vehicle.)
John Glenn.(We're almost certain that he was the first American to orbit the earth in anything,since we can't think of any other way to do it other than in a space vehicle.)