Well, sugar, if you want to catch a glimpse of that little dwarf planet in the chilly depths of space, your best bet is when it's at opposition, which happens roughly every 6 to 7 months. But, let's be real here, Pluto is so darn far away and teeny tiny that any time you try to spot it, you better have a strong telescope and some good ol' patience.
After they hit the ground.
There are forces of gravity between every speck of mass in the universe and every other speck of mass, no matter where they are, how far apart, or how large or small, all the time, everywhere, right now.
Pre-Galileo, no planets revolve around earth
Charon, Nix and Hydra are the 3 moons of Pluto. Pluto is no longer considered to be a planet, but is classified as a dwarf planet.
Pluto takes a long time to travel around the sun most simply because it has a long way to go. The path it takes is huge compared to Earth's orbit. If Earth is running on a 1/4-mile track, Pluto is jogging the 62 miles around Lake Winnepesaukee. It is also moving at about 1/5th the speed of Earth, because it is much smaller and farther away, which means the force of gravity is not acting on it very strongly.
The answer depends on what part of the earth you are on.
The time it takes Pluto to revolve around the sun is 247.9 Earth years. Pluto's rotation takes 6.39 Earth days.
When observing Pluto from a distance of 5.91 trillion miles (5910000000000 miles), you would be looking at Pluto as it was about 4 hours and 4 minutes ago. This is because the speed of light is finite and it takes time for the light from Pluto to reach the telescope on Earth.
yes
12 years
A year on Pluto is 247.92 sidereal years (Earth years).
It takes Pluto 6.4 earth days to complete one rotation.
Pluto rotates much more slowly than Earth so a day on Pluto is much longer than a day on Earth. A day on Pluto is 6.4 Earth days or 153.3 hours long.
Pluto's not a planet. but it takes 36 earth years to orbit.
An hour is a period defined for Earth beings. However, an hour being a part of a rotation of a planet, based on Earths period of rotation, then an hour on Pluto would be:- R / 24 where R is the rotation period. Pluto =~ 6.4 Earth Days. So 6.4 / 24
Dwarf Planet Pluto's "revolution" is the time of its orbit around the Sun, about 247.94 Earth years.Pluto's rotation period (spin on its axis) is the same as the orbital time of its large moon Charon (about 6.39 Earth days) because the two are tidally locked, the same side of Pluto always facing Charon.
The New Horizions space probe is expected to fly past Pluto and observe the planet some time in mid-2015. A visit will not occur for a long time, mainly due to the immense cost.