Pluto is the farthest planet from the sun . It has the longest orbit.
about 400
Earth an pluto
No. Pluto's not a planet. Its a big piece of rock that does'nt orbit like the other planets.
Most people are not happy or sad about it. Also, it wasn't technically a demotion; Pluto was placed into a more specific category of planet.
Pluto is the furthest planet away from the sun, making it the coldest, there are exactly 8 planets before the sun and Pluto: (SUN) Mars Venus Earth Mercury Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune Pluto
Pluto has no artificial satellites. We have never placed any satellites in orbit around Pluto, other than the New Horizons spacecraft, which was sent to do a flyby observation of Pluto for a short time, and then move on to Kuiper belt object (486958) 2014 MU69.
it was so small it wasnt exactly a planet it was a dwarf planet
No, Pluto is a dwarf planet made primarily of rock and ice, so it would not float in water. The density of Pluto is much higher than that of water, so it would sink if it were placed in a body of water.
No. Pluto is a dwarf planet, not a star, and is not visible to the naked eye.
thank me later-They believe it doesn't, because it doesn't to any measurable extent.The reverse is not true: Neptune has a very, very strong effect on Pluto's orbit. In fact, Pluto completes almost exactly three orbits for every two of Neptune's, and this is not a coincidence; such stable resonances are common.
The magnitude of the gravitational force between the sun and Earth would decrease if Earth was placed in Pluto's orbit. This is because the force of gravity between two objects is inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them, so as Earth moved farther away from the sun (as in Pluto's orbit), the gravitational force would weaken.
Pluto's gravitational field strength is about 6.7% of the Earth's.