Scientists with the latest technology say 15 years.It all depends on your velocity and the effects of gravitational technology which may be readily available in the near future.
it was so small it wasnt exactly a planet it was a dwarf planet
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)
Pluto is not a planet (it's a dwarf planet)
Pluto is a dwarf planet.
Charon takes around 6.4 Earth days to complete one orbit around Pluto. It is tidally locked with Pluto, meaning that one side always faces the planet.
Neptune. It would be Pluto, but Pluto is a dwarf planet ( a planet that was a planet, but decided that it wasn't a planet)
veary long Pluto is not a planet so u no ok that's all i can say
AS it is the last planet it will take you a long time several years infact. 9-10 year voyage
Pluto, it is now a dwarf planet or planetoid.
Pluto is no longer a planet. It is considered a dwarf planet or Kuiper Belt Object. The closest planet to it is Neptune and that is a long way off.
The dwarf planet Pluto is the planet with a year 248 earth years long.
Pluto is not a planet its a dwarf planet
The farthest planet from the sun used to be Pluto. Pluto is now considered to be a dwarf planet, not a planet. When Pluto was a planet, its orbit would sometimes take it closer to the sun than Neptune, making the Neptune the farthest planet from the sun for that period of time.
it was so small it wasnt exactly a planet it was a dwarf planet
It takes a space robot years just to get to a planet, Imagin Pluto, it would take about 50 years to get to pluto. That's why we just use the telescope.
5 years
pluto