They are fain't because they are very far away. PLuto even more so because it is small.
The planet after Uranus is Neptune so the order of the planets go...Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune& Pluto
Pluto is a very warm planet so since they are both in space plutos heat melts parts of neptune then neptune uses the melted rock and makes new forms
According to the astronauts, there is a very small chance that at one time Pluto will ever come close to Neptune. This assertion has been discussed in many forums bearing in mind that their orbit intersects. Gravitational resonance is the condition that prevents Pluto and Neptune from colliding.
Temperature relies on distance from the Sun. In order the planets are ... Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune Pluto So Mercury is hottest as it is closest to the Sun Mars is closer than Neptune, so is hotter. So Neptune is colder.
With Pluto now regarded as a dwarf planet, the answer is Neptune. There are times when Pluto's orbit takes it inside Neptune for about 20 years at a time out of its 248 year orbit, as it did from 1979 to 1999. So even when Pluto was considered a planet, it wasn't always the furthest away from the Sun.
The planet after Uranus is Neptune so the order of the planets go...Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune& Pluto
The planet after Uranus is Neptune so the order of the planets go...Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune& Pluto
Pluto is a very warm planet so since they are both in space plutos heat melts parts of neptune then neptune uses the melted rock and makes new forms
One the main differences is that Neptune has a source of heat deep inside the planet. So, even though it's much further from the Sun, Neptune's surface temperature is about the same as the temperature on Uranus. Also, the heat source is probably the cause of the more active weather systems seem in Neptune's atmosphere. Also, Neptune is denser than Uranus. So, even though Uranus has a slightly larger volume, Neptune has more mass. Uranus has a "weird " tilt. Its axis of rotation is tilted by about 90 degrees. Neptune has a more normal tilt, roughly similar to Earth's.
According to the astronauts, there is a very small chance that at one time Pluto will ever come close to Neptune. This assertion has been discussed in many forums bearing in mind that their orbit intersects. Gravitational resonance is the condition that prevents Pluto and Neptune from colliding.
Because they are the furthest planets away from the sun, so they receive less sunlight for warmth.
Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune [Pluto] So answer is Mars and Saturn
No. Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune are always further from the Sun then Earth is. Neptune is the furthest. (For Pluto fans, Pluto when it was regarded by the IAU as a planet was sometimes "furthest". But even then, it's orbit was so eccentric that sometimes Neptune was.)
5: Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune, and Uranus. Well, on the average, anyway. At the present, Pluto's orbit is cutting inside the orbit of Uranus, so technically, there are 4 planets between Earth and Pluto. But most of the time there are 5.
The dividing line is the Asteroid Belt, so the "inner planets" are the ones closer to the Sun than the Belt; Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars. The "outer" planets, then are the ones further away; Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.
Uranus, though unfortunately no one really knows why. Pluto also has a horizontal axis so it rolls on its side as well. However, Pluto is now classified as a dwarf planet so Uranus is the only planet of the 7 that spins this way.
Technically, Pluto has been named a dwarf planet and is no longer a planet. The order of the planets orbiting the Sun from the closest to the farthest are as follows: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, (and then Pluto if it was still a planet). So your answer is Neptune.