Pluto's orbit passes inside the orbit of Neptune.
Neptune.
Pluto does not have an orbit clear of asteroids and debris. Planets do.
Pluto's orbit is longer and slower than other planets.
The planet with an orbit that intersects the orbit of the dwarf planet Pluto is Neptune. Neptune, the eighth and farthest known planet from the Sun in the Solar System, has an orbit that crosses Pluto's orbit due to its elliptical path around the Sun. This orbital relationship between Neptune and Pluto is one of the factors that led to Pluto's reclassification as a dwarf planet in 2006 by the International Astronomical Union.
No, Pluto has not cleared the neighborhood around its orbit, which is one of the criteria set by the International Astronomical Union for a celestial body to be classified as a planet. Pluto's orbit intersects with that of Neptune and it shares its orbit with other objects in the Kuiper Belt.
1. Pluto doesn't orbit the same way as the other planets in a horizontal orbit it has a diagonal orbit
Yes, Pluto has a tilted orbit compared to the other planets in our solar system. Its orbit is inclined at an angle of about 17 degrees relative to the plane in which most other planets orbit the Sun.
Pluto is different from the inner planets in that it has not cleared it's orbit from asteroids.
the planet pluto
Charon was once a candidate for being a solar planet, I believe, but it is now considered a satellite of Pluto.Pluto has three known moons. The largest, Charon, is proportionally larger, compared to its primary, than any other satellite of a known planet or dwarf planet in the solar system. The other two moons, Nix and Hydra, are much smaller.-Pluto's Natural Satellites (Wikipedia)Also, check out 'Timeline of discovery of Solar System planets and their moons' on Wikipedia. (That's the title of their article, by the way.)Sorry I didn't provide links to the wiki articles. I'm doing this anonymously, and I don't feel like figuring out the site for one answer when I'm on someone else's computer. Just copy and paste the titles of the articles if you want to read them.
dwarf planets, an example would be Pluto.
Yes, Pluto as well as all of the dwarf planets orbit the Sun directly. They are not moons.