Unfortunately, there is not a simple answer.
The distance between Earth and Pluto is changing all the time.
Also, spacecraft follow complicated trajectories to reach their targets most efficiently,
using gravitational fields.
502 miles per hour
Because it is further out, it has a larger distance to travel than Earth.
With today's technology, travel time for an unmanned probe or unmanned small spacecraft is about 9 years. If you are talking about a ship that transports humans, we don't know.
The time it takes Pluto to revolve around the sun is 247.9 Earth years. Pluto's rotation takes 6.39 Earth days.
When observing Pluto from a distance of 5.91 trillion miles (5910000000000 miles), you would be looking at Pluto as it was about 4 hours and 4 minutes ago. This is because the speed of light is finite and it takes time for the light from Pluto to reach the telescope on Earth.
Pluto's largest moon is called Charon and it takes 6.39 days to travel around Pluto! It is also the largest moon in comparison to its "parent" planet in the solar system! (about half the size of Pluto)
It takes light approximately 5.5 hours to travel from the Sun to Pluto, which is about 4.67 billion miles away at its farthest point. The time it takes for a beam of light to reach Pluto depends on its distance from Earth at any given time.
yes
12 years
Pluto takes about 247 (earth) years for one revolution around the sun. Yes, you are quite wrong. LOL
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.
A year on Pluto is 247.92 sidereal years (Earth years).