Not yet. The New Horizons space probe, launched in 2006, will fly by Pluto in June 2015. Humans themselves have only been as far as the moon.
Humans have never gone farther than the moon. In 2015 the New Horizons space probe made a flyby of Pluto. It was the first time any man-made object has come close to Pluto.
None. There are not even any plans in development to visit Eris. Humans have never gone farther than the moon. Pluto is the most distant object visited by a man-made object.
No human has ever been on Pluto. It is a dwarf planet located in the outer solar system, and no spacecraft designed to carry humans has ever traveled to Pluto. The closest spacecraft, NASA's New Horizons, conducted a flyby of Pluto in 2015.
No. Beyond Pluto, there are thousands of other objects orbiting the Sun.
No. Pluto may be considered a "dwarf planet" but it is still larger than most countries.
Humans have never gone farther than the moon. In 2015 the New Horizons space probe made a flyby of Pluto. It was the first time any man-made object has come close to Pluto.
None. There are not even any plans in development to visit Eris. Humans have never gone farther than the moon. Pluto is the most distant object visited by a man-made object.
No human has ever been on Pluto. It is a dwarf planet located in the outer solar system, and no spacecraft designed to carry humans has ever traveled to Pluto. The closest spacecraft, NASA's New Horizons, conducted a flyby of Pluto in 2015.
yes if they want
Can you tell us if humans can survive on pluto.
No. Beyond Pluto, there are thousands of other objects orbiting the Sun.
It is now known as a dwarf planet because there remain many other objects in Pluto's orbital pathway. Pluto has not cleared most of this "debris." There are, as well, larger objects than Pluto in the Kuiper Belt.
no
The extreme conditions on Pluto make it unlikely that humans could survive. Pluto is very cold and icy most of the year. Water is instantly frozen.
Humans can not destroy pluto, as they have not reached that planet.
No. Pluto may be considered a "dwarf planet" but it is still larger than most countries.
Yes. Pluto is at the inner edge of the Kuiper belt, which contains millions of comets and a number of Pluto-like objects.