ink, collar, designer sweater (when he is off set), fur, skin, bones, muscle, and internal organs (liver, kidney, etc). That is what makes up Pluto
Pluto has 5 internal layers.
there is no way to know because nobody has ever even been close enough to Pluto to know
Pluto, it is now a dwarf planet or planetoid.
neptuneNeptune is the closest to Pluto. Uranus is the second closest planet to Pluto. Saturn is the third closest planet to Pluto. Jupiter is the forth closest planet to Pluto. Mars is the fifth closest planet to Pluto. Earth is the sixth closest planet to Pluto. Venus is the seventh closest planet to Pluto. Mercury is the most furthest away from Pluto. The Sun and the moon are not considered as planets. The planet Pluto is also not considered as a planet.
the greek god of the underworld Pluto
Pluto has 5 internal layers.
pu & toe are the only two layers of Pluto get it!!!!
No. Pluto has some layers of haze in its atmosphere, but no actual clouds.
Not really. Pluto's atmosphere has a few layers of haze but not full-fledged clouds.
there is no way to know because nobody has ever even been close enough to Pluto to know
if the interior is warm enough there will be enough energy for interior convection or the turning over inside Pluto by Sandra
mars earth,juipter,saturn,uranus,venus,pluto
Pluto, it is now a dwarf planet or planetoid.
Pluto is much more terrestrial than gas giant in character, with a composition thought to be over half rock, with a rocky core, and outer layers of water ice, and frozen nitrogen, methane and carbon dioxide towards the surface. Pluto no longer qualifies as a planet per a reclassification made by the IAU in 2006, and is now consideed a minor or dwarf planet.
Carl.......Just kidding its PLUTO
When Pluto has an atmosphere, at its closest approach to the Sun, this thin layer is comprised of nitrogen, methane, and carbon monoxide. The problem with percentages is that it changes constantly. The irregular heating of the surface, the greenhouse nature of methane that causes inversion layers, and the sheer distance Pluto is from our ability to observe it make determining the average level of any of these three gases extremely difficult at best. We didn't even know for certain until 1985 that Pluto even had an atmosphere.
Pluto is Pluto in Hebrew פלוטו