Not that we are aware of. Pluto is too cold to support Earthly forms of life, and has no atmosphere to speak of.
It is possible, in Science Fiction, to create the sort of life form that could exist on Pluto; SF legend E.E. Smith did, and called them "Palainians". But it will be a LONG time before we can actually see if anything is there.
I don't expect anyone.
No here are the reasons:
and i like **
Well there is a possibility of a life form that do not need any of the listed things.
i dnt think so. If you look at the requirements for life, none of them are present on pluto. Actualy, its been disqualified from the list of planets. Its not even a planet as of now. . .
Highly unlikely, Pluto is just to cold for that
Then we will be astounded by such an unlikely thing
Nothing lives on Pluto.
No one lives on Pluto.
no
NO
Yes. Because of its orbit Neptune and Pluto switch places every 20 years.
Plutonium doesn't occur in nature as far as we know, but if Pluto were made of solid Plutonium, nothing would happen. Pluto is not near anything that might be affected.
Pluto has many features on it. One bieing highlands. Another being maria. And another being craters. those are some features on pluto, they are pretty much the same as our moons! :)
The NASA probe "New Horizons" was launched in 2006 to study Pluto, and it will reach the vicinity of the planet in 2015 (closest approach to Pluto on July 14 of that year)
Nothing, the atmosphere of Pluto is made of of mostly methane, nitrogen, and carbon dioxide. Human science has yet to discover life on a planet other than Earth and believe that water and oxygen must be in the atmosphere to sustain life giving properties. Even if Pluto had atmospheric conditions similar to Earth its distance from the Sun would not allow for a climate to sustain life. Pluto is basically a very large ice rock where temperatures drop well well below 0.
No one lives in or on Pluto. No one has visited Pluto.
No one
no it is not
pluto.... it spins clockwise...
Yes. Pluto is at the inner edge of the Kuiper belt, which contains millions of comets and a number of Pluto-like objects.
Nothing lives on Pluto, as far as we know, mainly because it's too far away from the sun.
Yes. Because of its orbit Neptune and Pluto switch places every 20 years.
Regina was named after KING REGINA ZOG, who currently lives on Pluto
Plutonium doesn't occur in nature as far as we know, but if Pluto were made of solid Plutonium, nothing would happen. Pluto is not near anything that might be affected.
Pluto is not a moon of anything; it is a dwarf planet. Scientists used to think that Pluto may have once been a moon of Neptune, but later studies showed that it could not be so due to the nature of Pluto's orbit.
Anything that has mass has gravity. Pluto, which has a mass of 0.0125x1024kg, has a force of gravity that is equal to 0.58m/s2 - a value that is about 6% that of the gravity on Earth.
No water, so that means that nothing can survive. The answer is no.