I would wear a really warm coat. A REALLY warm coat. Pluto is very far from the Sun, so it gets very cold there. Bring gloves, too.
That question has never come up yet, since there has never been
a manned mission to Pluto, and there are no plans for one.
pluto the god is a male and while im at it the dog pluto from walt disney is a boy
No. While Pluto is very cold, it is not cold enough for hydrogen to freeze.
No. While frozen methane, carbon dioxide, and nitrogen do exist on Pluto, they are not metals.
No, Pluto is too cold for liquid water. Any water there would be frozen into ice.
One major difference is their size. Pluto is significantly smaller than the solid inner planets like Earth, Mars, Venus, and Mercury. Another difference is their composition. Inner planets are primarily composed of rock and metal, while Pluto is composed mostly of ice and rock. Additionally, inner planets have clear and defined orbits around the Sun, while Pluto's orbit is more eccentric and tilted.
An astronaut landing on Pluto would need to wear a spacesuit that is not much different from those used now for spacewalks in orbit of Earth.
pluto the god is a male and while im at it the dog pluto from walt disney is a boy
His Helmet of Invisibility.
No. While Pluto is very cold, it is not cold enough for hydrogen to freeze.
Mars, it only has two moons, while there are thought to be at least 5 for Pluto.
~Well~Pluto's day is 6.4 Earth days, while Pluto's year is 248 Earth years.
While the planet Mercury and Pluto have some similarities, they are quite different. Mercury is much warmer than Pluto because of its proximity to the sun. The year on Mercury is 88 days compared to 248 years for Pluto.
well, you just start talking while playing
No. While frozen methane, carbon dioxide, and nitrogen do exist on Pluto, they are not metals.
no
No, Pluto is too cold for liquid water. Any water there would be frozen into ice.
That would be Pluto-Charon. While Charon is usually though of as Pluto's largest moon it does not actually orbit Pluto. It is close enough to Pluto's mass that rather than Charon orbiting Pluto, the two objects revolve around their common center of mass, which lies between them, above the surface of Pluto. Keep in mind that Pluto is no longer considered a planet.