Pluto hitting one of Neptune's moons would probably destroy that moon, leaving a bunch of debris scattered in the area. Over time, that debris would probably collect into a new ring around Neptune.
If Pluto hit Neptune, Neptune wouldn't be destroyed. Neptune has 10,000 times the mass of Pluto. There would definitely be some effects on Neptune, probably spraying debris into orbit and creating a new ring or even moon of Neptune. Also, the weather patterns of Neptune would be quite changed, so we'd probably see a bunch of dark spots or other changes to the appearance of Neptune.
I do not understand your question, but I can tell you that Neptune has 13 moons and Pluto has 3.
None. Moons orbit Neptune. Planets orbit the Sun
About a factor of 21.5. One of Neptune's moons, Triton, is about 20% larger than Pluto.
Titan is one of Saturn's moons. So, in order from the Sun, It would be Saturn, Neptune, and then Pluto.
Pluto doesn't orbit any planets, it orbits the sun. But if you mean what planet does Pluto share a orbit with is Neptune. Pluto sometimes is closer to the sun than Neptune because it cuts into Neptune's orbit.
I do not understand your question, but I can tell you that Neptune has 13 moons and Pluto has 3.
No
Pluto was one of Neptune's moons that somehow escaped its orbit.
None. Moons orbit Neptune. Planets orbit the Sun
Titan is one of Saturn's moons. So, in order from the Sun, It would be Saturn, Neptune, and then Pluto.
About a factor of 21.5. One of Neptune's moons, Triton, is about 20% larger than Pluto.
Earth has one moon, Mars has 2 moons, Jupiter has 63 known moons to date, Saturn has 34 moons, Uranus has 27 moons, Neptune has 7 moons, Pluto has 3 moons.
62 moons orbit Saturn, 67 orbit Jupiter, 5 orbit Pluto, 14 orbit Neptune, and 27 orbit Uranus.
Pluto doesn't orbit any planets, it orbits the sun. But if you mean what planet does Pluto share a orbit with is Neptune. Pluto sometimes is closer to the sun than Neptune because it cuts into Neptune's orbit.
Jupiter has 63 known natural satellites (with a 64th and more possible as of 2008). Saturn has 60 or more, Uranus 27 or more, Neptune 13 currently known, and Pluto has three confirmed moons (the largest, Charon, is nearly the same size as Pluto).
Triton, one of Pluto's moons, is the coldest moon in the solar system. In second place is Charon, another one of Pluto's moons.
No and never was. There was an earlier hypothesis that it might have been a moon of Neptune, but this rejected due to the distance from Neptune. It is more than likely that Pluto is just a large Kuiper belt object.