It would be as crowded as Puerto Rico is.
The mass of a person on Pluto remains the same as on Earth, as mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object and does not change with location. However, the weight of that person, which is the force of gravity acting on their mass, would be less on Pluto due to its lower gravitational acceleration. Consequently, a person would weigh significantly less on Pluto compared to Earth.
Where you are has no effect on your age. If you were on Pluto you would be the same age as if you had stayed on earth.
90,580.0653 earth daysFirst you must break it down the same units of measure, because Pluto rotates around the sun every 248 (earth) years, and rotates on it's axis every 6.387 (earth) days. what we're going to do is put everything down to days. 248 (earth) years is about 90580.0653 (earth) days and since we already have Pluto's day at 6.387 (earth) days it just simple division if you want to know the amount of (Pluto) days in a (Pluto) year. 90580.0653/6.387 and you get your answer.There are roughly 14,181.9423 (Pluto) days in a (Pluto) year. Hope it helpsthere are 90,472 days in a year on pluto
Same as Pluto. Charon is a moon of Pluto.Same as Pluto. Charon is a moon of Pluto.Same as Pluto. Charon is a moon of Pluto.Same as Pluto. Charon is a moon of Pluto.
If Pluto's orbit were on the same plane as Earth's orbit, if Earth were directly between the sun and Pluto, if Earth were at its aphelion (the point in its orbit where it's farthest from the sun), and if Pluto were at its perihelion (the point in its orbit closest to the sun), on the scale where the diameter of Earth is 5 mm, the distance from Earth to Pluto is about 1.681 km (a little over a mile).
Pluto has about the same amount of land as Russia.
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7billion people....the same amount of people there are on the earth
An hour is a period defined for Earth beings. However, an hour being a part of a rotation of a planet, based on Earths period of rotation, then an hour on Pluto would be:- R / 24 where R is the rotation period. Pluto =~ 6.4 Earth Days. So 6.4 / 24
Yes. Mass is a measure of matter. If you were to go to Pluto, you would still have the matter that you're made up of. The difference in the gravitational force of Pluto and that of Earth would affect your weight, but not your mass.
Pluto's thin atmosphere does contain some amount of ionized gas, or plasma, but not on the same scale as planets with more substantial atmospheres like Earth. The solar wind compresses and interacts with Pluto's atmosphere, creating regions of ionized gases.
scientists decided that it is not a planet because there are other things out in earth that are basically the same thing well has the same features as Pluto therefore if they named Pluto a planet they would have to name those planets as well