6.3 days
Pluto's largest moon is called Charon and it takes 6.39 days to travel around Pluto! It is also the largest moon in comparison to its "parent" planet in the solar system! (about half the size of Pluto)
there isn't a correct answer, but i suggest you take a look at NASA s website have a look at Moons, there should be a fact file on the moon Charon. Another viewpoint: I think there is a correct answer. Charon's period of revolution (around Pluto) is about 6.387 Earth days.
The distance of Pluto doesn't matter, since the orbit would be the same no matter how fast Pluto travels.The orbit of Pluto is about 22,698,700,000 miles long. if Pluto traveled that distance at 62500 miles per second, it would take 363179.2 seconds or about 100 hours to orbit the Sun.
Pluto's orbital period is about 248.09 earth years, or 90,613,305 days.
Pluto takes about 248 Earth years to complete one orbit around the Sun. Its long orbit is due to its distance from the Sun and its slow speed of movement.
Pluto's largest moon is called Charon and it takes 6.39 days to travel around Pluto! It is also the largest moon in comparison to its "parent" planet in the solar system! (about half the size of Pluto)
No answer Pluto orbits the Sun Pluto does not orbit the Earth
A long time.
there isn't a correct answer, but i suggest you take a look at NASA s website have a look at Moons, there should be a fact file on the moon Charon. Another viewpoint: I think there is a correct answer. Charon's period of revolution (around Pluto) is about 6.387 Earth days.
The distance of Pluto doesn't matter, since the orbit would be the same no matter how fast Pluto travels.The orbit of Pluto is about 22,698,700,000 miles long. if Pluto traveled that distance at 62500 miles per second, it would take 363179.2 seconds or about 100 hours to orbit the Sun.
Pluto's orbital period is about 248.09 earth years, or 90,613,305 days.
It takes approximately 247.92 Earth years for Pluto to orbit the Sun.
There is a space probe on its way to Pluto and Charon (its largest moon) called New Horizons. Even as the fastest man made object to leave earth, it will still take 10 years or so to get there, arriving sometime in 2015.
Pluto takes about 248 Earth years to complete one orbit around the Sun. Its long orbit is due to its distance from the Sun and its slow speed of movement.
It takes 248 years for Pluto to complete its orbit.
Pluto's year - the period of its revolution around the Sun is 90,581 Earth days, roughly 248 Earth years.
The long axis of Pluto's orbit is 11.8 billion km (79 AU), so the two farthest points in its orbit are 655 light-minutes (10.9 light-hours) apart.