It takes 5 hours 28 minutes and 30 seconds for light from the sun to reach Pluto.
No, it is not true that Pluto is known as the "anus planet." Pluto is a dwarf planet located in the outer regions of our solar system. It was once classified as the ninth planet but was reclassified as a dwarf planet in 2006.
Too long
My brother is connected to a base of the arm forces. He called me today an he sounded very nervous i asked whats going on he informed me that planet Pluto is no longer . He could not talk long anyway he said that something hit Pluto an destroyed it. I have search the internet an have found nothing.
Craters don't hit anything. A crater is a hole or dent left by an explosion or a collision. Although Pluto has never been photographed with enough detail to see any craters, there is no doubt that it has them as all major bodies in the solar system experience collisions and Pluto is in a region where it has a fair chance of colliding with comets.
Light travels at approximately 186,282 miles per second. So, to calculate the time it takes for light to travel 58,656,960,000,000,000,000,000 miles, you would divide the distance by the speed of light. This would give you approximately 315,102,786 seconds or about 9,996 years.
Pluto was never visited.
its not!
Yes, but a meteor hit Pluto and a small part of Pluto went flying off and landed in our Solar System.
No, it is not true that Pluto is known as the "anus planet." Pluto is a dwarf planet located in the outer regions of our solar system. It was once classified as the ninth planet but was reclassified as a dwarf planet in 2006.
The reason Pluto is not a planet is because it is very small, smaller than Earth's moon!
The rays from the sun take 8 minutes to hit the earth
A long time...
Too long
Depends from where
My brother is connected to a base of the arm forces. He called me today an he sounded very nervous i asked whats going on he informed me that planet Pluto is no longer . He could not talk long anyway he said that something hit Pluto an destroyed it. I have search the internet an have found nothing.
Some say that Pluto was originally a tiny satellite of Neptune, when a large comet hit it with such tremendous force that it caused little Pluto to be knocked out of orbit and become considerably larger. The fragments became Pluto's moons which are known as Nix, Hydra, and the largest, Charon.
Craters don't hit anything. A crater is a hole or dent left by an explosion or a collision. Although Pluto has never been photographed with enough detail to see any craters, there is no doubt that it has them as all major bodies in the solar system experience collisions and Pluto is in a region where it has a fair chance of colliding with comets.