Pluto? Oh honey, don't even get me started on that former planet. Earth's moon would probably be the closest in terms of size and relationship to a larger body, but let's be real here, Pluto is in a league of its own—even if it got demoted.
Pluto is a part of our solar system, and our solar system is a part of the Milky Way Galaxy. Thus: Pluto is a part of the Milky Way.
If you count Pluto, nine planets. Some people think Pluto is too small and too far to be part of the Solar System. Poor Pluto...
Mercury is the smallest planet in our solar system after Pluto.
Pluto was discovered using the blinking technique in 1930. This technique involves comparing two images taken at different times to identify objects that move against the background of stars. By observing Pluto's movement between two images, astronomer Clyde Tombaugh was able to identify it as a new object in our solar system.
Pluto was recently stripped of the honour of being a planet
There are no people on Pluto, or on any other object in our solar system except Earth.
Pluto.
The biggest object in the solar system is the sun, and the smallest is Pluto
Pluto is a member of the solar system because any object in the solar system is a member of the solar system. However, if you were asking if Pluto is a planet in the solar system then the answer is no. Pluto used to be a planet but is now considered a dwarf planet.
No. Pluto orbits in our solar system.
No, the planets after Pluto are still within our solar system. After Pluto, there is Eris, Haumea, Makemake, and several other dwarf planets and minor planets that are part of our solar system. Beyond these, there is the Kuiper Belt and the Oort Cloud which are also part of our solar system.
No. Pluto's main moon, Charon at about half of Pluto's diameter, is the largest moon in proportion to the object it orbits. Several moons in the solar system, including our own, are actually larger than Pluto. The solar system's largest moon is Ganymede, which orbits Jupiter.
Sedna is the most distant solar system object discovered so far. It is about three times farther away than Pluto currently is. Because it is so far away, scientists are not sure if it has enough mass to be classified as a dwarf planet.
It is not the dominant object in the neighbourhood of its orbit.
The sun is in front of the solar system and Pluto is at the far end of the Solar system.
No. Nothing has replaced Pluto. The object known as "Planet Biyo" is actually an asteroid, not a planet.
Since the 2006 reclassification of Pluto to a Dwarf Planet, there are now eight planets in our solar system.