Pluto.
No, currently Pluto is farther. Pluto crossed the orbit of Neptune in 1999, and is heading farther from the Sun and the Earth. It will be over 200 years before Pluto returns closer to us than Neptune.
They are farther from the sun than the Earth is.
it's because that they were asteroids that was bigger then Pluto so it was hard to find out which is Pluto and which are the asteroids
the planet farther than Pluto is Eris the planet farther than Pluto is Eris the planet farther than Pluto is Eris the planet farther than Pluto is Eris the planet further than neptune is nothing in our solar system but out of our solar system it,s Eris
Pluto does not have an orbit clear of asteroids and debris. Planets do.
Nobody has ever been to Pluto. The only body that astronauts have walked onbesides Earth is the moon. The closest to Earth that Pluto can ever get is morethan 11 thousand times farther than the moon.
Pluto has asteroids in its orbital path. Planets don't.
No, Earth is third in line, Pluto is last but now scientist think there is another planet farther away.
I think because pluto is farther from the sun than earth the nitrogen is probally frozen so there is not as much and it is colder than the nitrogen found on earth
Pluto is farther from the Sun than the eight planets. It takes 248 years to complete one orbit. This means that one year on Pluto equals 248 Earth years.
it has a one fifth mass of earths moon and one third volume of earths moon
The system of Pluto-Charon is similar to our Earth-Moon system, with Charon (Pluto's large moon) rotating the dwarf planet and having one face always toward Pluto. However, Charon is almost half Pluto's size. This means that the center of gravity for the pair is outside Pluto's surface, and the two actually co-rotate. Pluto's other two moons, Hydra and Nix, are likely captured asteroids. The closest thing to another for Earth is one of the many Sun-orbiting asteroids that cross our orbit. Named "Cruithne", it is smaller than Hydra and Nix, but has too high a relative velocity in its own orbit to be captured by Earth.