Yes, there is a satellite that orbits around Pluto its name is Charon. Charon is half the size of Pluto, with a diameter of 1200km. Pluto and Charon orbit each other like double planets.
The dwarf planet Pluto.
Pluto is not a satellite. It is a dwarf planet that is the furthest from our Sun.
Charon is a natural satellite of Pluto, but Pluto is a planetesimal, not a planet.
Pluto is a dwarf planet, so it is technically, it is not a planet like earth or mars.
pluto
The Hubble telescope satellite.
Are you think of Pluto? If so it remains a satellite but has been reclassified as a dwarf planet.
Charon. It's more of a satellite than a planet, unless you want to consider Pluto/Charon as a double planet. That's a little awkward, since Pluto has been downgraded to a planetoid.
Pluto. But it's no longer a planet, so technically none
No.It is a satellite (moon) of Pluto, which itself was declared a "Dwarf Planet" at the International Astronomical Union (IAU) Symposium in 2006.Pluto is very small - only 2/3rds the size of Earth's moon. Charon is 1/2 that size - which is large enough that the IAU would have faced calling Pluto-Charon a "Double Planet" if they had decided to call Pluto one.However, IAU's decision was based upon the fact that there are MANY objects in similar orbits to Pluto's (some even larger than Pluto itself, such as Eris), and we would have ended up listing dozens (possibly hundreds) of objects as "Planets"No. Charon is not a planet; it is a moon of the dwarf planet Pluto.
The New Horizons space probe was the first spacecraft to explore Pluto. The mission to the minor planet happened in 2015.
Yes but keep in mind Pluto is NOT a official planet in the solar system. Neptune was discovered in 1846 and Pluto was discovered in 1930. Pluto is in the solar system, but it is not a major planet, it's called a dwarf planet. A planet which is in the solar system, but not a satellite. So Neptune is the farthest major planet from the sun. It takes 164.79 years for Neptune to orbit the sun lol.