If you had to choose one, you could only pick Pluto.
Neptune is a gas giant, it has no solid surface. If you tried to stand on Neptune, you would sink into the planet and be incinerated by the molten ammonia core.
There are no inhabitants on Neptune. The planet is too gaseous, cold, and windy to support any sort of life.Also, there is very little amount of light and heat due to the long distance between the sun and Neptune.Due to this there can be no atmosphere or plant life.
Since the planet Neptune is a gas giant, it is not a hospitable place for growing food, and I greatly doubt that anyone will ever live there or grow food there, however, the moons of Neptune, which are still not easy places to live, are nonetheless much easier places to live than Neptune, and perhaps people will some day live there and grow food there. Although even that is unlikely.
Pluto is so cold that you would freeze to death, which may or may not be a good thing.
Pluto's late discovery precludes a historic or folk tradition. Ancient peoples were unaware that it existed. The planet was named after the Roman god of the dead, the underworld, and the outer regions. Pluto was the son of Saturn, grandson of Uranus, and brother of Jupiter and Neptune. Mortals generally viewed him with dread.
A person couldn't live on Neptune for a second, due to the high winds and the extremely could temperature's (cold as in you would go into hypothermia in seconds) (and high winds as in 1 200 mph!) so .*. you couldn't live on Neptune at all!
no one lives on neptune and it would be impossible to. way too cold there
There are no inhabitants on Neptune. The planet is too gaseous, cold, and windy to support any sort of life.Also, there is very little amount of light and heat due to the long distance between the sun and Neptune.Due to this there can be no atmosphere or plant life.
Too cold.
nope
No.
air
Since the planet Neptune is a gas giant, it is not a hospitable place for growing food, and I greatly doubt that anyone will ever live there or grow food there, however, the moons of Neptune, which are still not easy places to live, are nonetheless much easier places to live than Neptune, and perhaps people will some day live there and grow food there. Although even that is unlikely.
Pluto is so cold that you would freeze to death, which may or may not be a good thing.
No, no one can live on Neptune
An imaginary one.
You couldn't without VERY advanced technology.
Jupiter is considered a planet in spite of the fact that it is gaseous because it orbits the Sun, is spherical, and cleared all matter from its orbit. The gas that it is made of is still matter and the center has very dense liquid and frozen solids, as well as a rocky core. Its gravitational pull also influences asteroids in the asteroid belt between Jupiter and Mars by altering their orbits around the Sun. Pluto is smaller than some planetary moons and is closer in size to large asteroids such as Ceres. It is now classified as a dwarf planet, along with several even more- distant icy planetoids. Two such objects, Eris, and Sedna may be larger than Pluto. (See links)There exists a large number of undiscovered small planetoids (plutoids) that are smaller than Pluto but occupy similar orbits. Some may eventually be designated dwarf planets as well._____________________________________________________________The codified IAU definition of a planet does not consider whether a planet is mostly solid or gas, but all have solid cores. There is a new requirement (primary object in its orbit) that Pluto simply does not live up to. Not only Jupiter, but Saturn, Neptune, and Uranus are also mostly gas by volume. (see discussion)----- It has not cleared its orbit. It shares its orbit with many other asteroids and dwarf-planets in the Kuiper Belt, where Pluto spends most of its time. The idea of Pluto coming within Neptune's orbit is somewhat misunderstood. Indeed Pluto is closer to the sun than Neptune for very roughly 15 or 20 years of Pluto's 248 year orbit, but there is no danger that the two will collide. Their orbits do not actually intersect. Their movements are harmonically locked. For every three orbits of Neptune, there are two orbits of Pluto. Because of this some say that Pluto could even be considered a very unusual satellite of Neptune. But Pluto's relationship with Neptune is not a reason for it being considered a dwarf planet. As a note, if Neptune could be an obstacle to Pluto's status as a planet, then Pluto would be an obstacle for Neptune to be considered a planet! Because of the harmonic relationship between the two, Pluto is not considered a piece of debris that Neptune has not yet captured. Neptune will never capture it.