The question is too vague to answer.
Pluto. Average surface temperature is 44 Kelvin (-229°C)
If you count Pluto, the answer is PLUTO.
Yes without counting Pluto; no if you count Pluto.
The average distance between Pluto and its moon Nix is about 19,600 kilometers. Nix orbits around Pluto at a distance of roughly 30,000 kilometers.
Currently, there are only eight planets in our solar system, so there is no tenth planet. The tenth planet ever to be discovered (not counting Pluto as a planet) is a planet that orbits the star PSR B1257+12. It is about a thousand light years away from the sun.
there are none, if you're not counting Pluto as a planet.
When Pluto was classified as a planet it was 9th from the Sun. But, it's now classified as a dwarf planet and, counting both planets and dwarf planets, Pluto is 10th from the sun.
A mean average of 38.5 AUs from Earth. Pluto is 39-49 AU from the planet Earth, depending on the relative position of the planets in their orbits.
5 900 000 000 miles = 9 495 129 600 kilometers Pluto (no longer a planet) is at a distance of 5,945,900,000 km So this planet would have to be out beyond Pluto. As Neptune is the last planet out, the answer therefore has to be there is no planet at 5900 million miles from the sun.
pluto
Pluto does not have a consistent temperature, as it varies greatly depending on its distance from the Sun. On average, Pluto's surface temperature is around -375°F (-225°C), making it one of the coldest places in our solar system.
5.906 billion km, or 39.5 AU, where one AU is the Earth to Sun distance. Plutos distance from the sun varies a lot throughout its 248 year orbit, ranging from 7.375 billion km (49.3 AU) at its furthest to 4.436 billion km (29.7 AU) at its closest.