Neither Johannes Kepler nor the Kepler Space Telescope discovered Pluto. Pluto was discovered by Clyde Tombaugh in 1930, long after Johannes Kepler died and long before the Kepler telescope was created. The Kepler telescope was built to discover planets in other solar systems, not our own.
Kepler-22b is about 620 light years or about 3.6 quadrillion miles away. It works out to the same whether you use Pluto or Earth as a reference point, as our distance to Pluto is tiny compared with our distance to Kepler-22b.
Kepler’s 3rd law and Newton’s law of gravity
Pluto, as well as every other visible and observable object in the solar system, confirms the work of Kepler, Newton, and Einstein, with no weird anomalies remaining.
... when it is closest to the Sun. (Kepler's Second Law)... when it is closest to the Sun. (Kepler's Second Law)... when it is closest to the Sun. (Kepler's Second Law)... when it is closest to the Sun. (Kepler's Second Law)
No. Kepler is a telescope created to find planets orbiting other stars. Planets found using it are given designations beginning with Kepler, such as Kepler 440b.
Kepler is not a planet; it is a telescope used to find planets in other solar systems. Planets discovered by it are given names beginning with Kepler, such as Kepler-22b.
Pluto was discovered in 1930.
Kepler and titanus
There is no Planet Kepler. The Kepler telescope was built to find planets in other solar systems. Planets it finds are given designations such as Kepler-62e. The telescope has found hundreds of planets with a wide range of characteristics.
DISCOVERED BY: kent,raffy & kenneth...
The Kepler project to find planets will continue to grow their database of confirmed planets. As of Dec 5, 2011 the largest are: by mass = Kepler 14b by radius = Kepler 17b by density = Kepler 22b
Yes. Pluto is the smallest planet in the solar system