1. Mercury
2. Venus
3. Earth
4. Mars
5. Ceres
6. Jupiter
7. Saturn
8. Uranus
9. Neptune
10. Pluto
11. Haumea
12. Makemake
13. Eris
Since the promotion of Ceres from an asteroid to a dwarf planet, the new 9th planet is Neptune.
(bold = dwarf Planet)
but Pluto is not in our solar sysytem
Back when Pluto was a planet and not a dwarf planet, it sometimes Neptune to be the ninth planet because their orbit crossed. Now that Pluto is a dwarf planet, there are only eight planets in the solar system.
yes it was but not any more.
Pluto has been recategorised as a dwarf planet. Until its change in status it was considered to be the ninth planet from the sun. Though, on occasion, its orbit brought it closer than to the sun than Neptune, the eighth planet.
It is very unlikely.
Pluto was considered the ninth planet.
The ninth planet of our solar system was Pluto. However - the planet was downgraded from planet status, and is now considered part of the Kepler belt.
No, Pluto was the ninth planet, but now, there is no ninth planet in this Solar System, since Pluto got turned into a dwarf planet. Your anus is a planet.
Neptune is the eighth planet. Pluto, formerly the ninth planet, is no longer considered a planet.
From the New world.
Back when Pluto was a planet and not a dwarf planet, it sometimes Neptune to be the ninth planet because their orbit crossed. Now that Pluto is a dwarf planet, there are only eight planets in the solar system.
No
pluto
Pluto
"The ninth plant" is meaningless, since there's no natural ordering for plants."The ninth planet" is also meaningless, because there are only eight solar planets, and there's no natural ordering for planets in general. "The ninth planet around the star Mumbojumbo" might have some meaning, assuming that a) there were a star named Mumbojumbo and b) it had at least nine planets, but as it is, your question cannot be answered.
From it's discovery in 1930 until 2006, Pluto was the ninth planet. In 2006 it was reclassified as a 'dwarf planet','so is no longer a 'planet'. There are only eight bodies in our solar system now internationally recognised as planets.
No. The fifth planet is Jupiter. Pluto was once considered the ninth planet, but is no longer considered a planet.
At age 11, in 1930, Venetia Burney of England suggested the name "Pluto" for the newly discovered ninth planet.