They did not send astronauts to Pluto. Also, Pluto is a dwarf planet, not a dwarf star.
no
Pluto is the furthest planet in the solar system from the sun. No astronauts have ever been actually on Pluto. THERE ARE NO TOURIST ATTRACTIONS ON PLUTO!
Theoretical astronauts visiting Pluto would only be able to eat the foods they brought with them.
Already astronauts have went to go to see Pluto. The astronauts left Earth ON the year of 2011. IT would take 2015 to see Pluto and land on its surface. It would take 4 years, but now 3 because of the year being 2012. Hope this answer helped! :)
A dwarf planet, although that designation continues to be disputed by some scientists.
The closest planet to Pluto is Neptune, the closest object would be Chiron which is Pluto's "moon", although it is little more than a captured asteroid.
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.
There are no astronauts on board New Horizons. New Horizons is an unmanned spacecraft that was launched by NASA to explore the dwarf planet Pluto and its moons. It completed its flyby of Pluto in July 2015. It collected valuable data and images of the distant world before continuing its journey into the Kuiper Belt.
Wait so I tell you some things about pluto? Okay. Well Pluto USE to be the 9th planet but now it is a dwarf planet. That means it is not a real planet really. It is at the end of the solar system which is farthest from the sun so it's EXTREMELY cold in Pluto. It is so cold that no life can possibly be on Pluto and astronauts need warm air filled suits to go on Pluto!
Aircraft travel through the air, not through space, so they can't go to Pluto. No spacecraft have been to Pluto yet, although one is on the way.
Pluto is a solid planet. Pluto is made mostly of ice, although the core is most likely rock with metal in it.
Last. The planets in the order they are in is: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto, although technically Pluto is a sub-planet