It would be no brighter than some planets as seen from Earth : brighter than the other stars but not much larger. Since Pluto is so far away from the sun (at a average distance of 3,670,050,000 miles), the sun would look much dimmer and smaller that it does from here on Earth. From Pluto, the sun would look like a very bright star and would light up Pluto during the day about as much as the full moon lights up Earth at night.
From the distance of Pluto, the Sun would look like a very bright star.
Well first of all, Pluto is very small like a star. Plus it is far away and cold and you have to be close enough or be on Pluto to see it.
Pluto is much too small to become a star. Stars are thousands of times larger than Pluto.
No. Pluto is a dwarf planet, not a star, and is not visible to the naked eye.
No, Pluto is not a star. Pluto is a dwarf planet located in our solar system, specifically in the Kuiper Belt. Stars are massive celestial bodies that generate light and heat through nuclear reactions in their cores.
From the distance of Pluto, the Sun would look like a very bright star.
a star
Pluto is a dwarf planet, not a star. See related questions,
Pluto orbits "Sol".
No, Pluto is a Drawf Planet.
Well first of all, Pluto is very small like a star. Plus it is far away and cold and you have to be close enough or be on Pluto to see it.
Pluto never changed to a star. In 2006 it was reclassified as a dwarf planet.
Pluto is much too small to become a star. Stars are thousands of times larger than Pluto.
No. Pluto is a dwarf planet, not a star, and is not visible to the naked eye.
Pluto is not a star. It is classified as a dwarf planet. It was reclassified on August 24, 2006.
Pluto is a star
because pluto is no longer a planet it is a star