About a factor of 21.5. One of Neptune's moons, Triton, is about 20% larger than Pluto.
The planets that are smaller than Venus are: Jupiter, Earth, Neptune, Uranus, and Saturn. Pluto is no longer on the list
I do not understand your question, but I can tell you that Neptune has 13 moons and Pluto has 3.
Many asteroids have an eccentric orbit, that is, the orbit's ellipse is very stretched. Pluto is just one of many planetoids with this characteristic.
its not, Pluto is much smaller than the earth. By volume, Pluto is less than 0.6% of Earths volume.
According to the astronauts, there is a very small chance that at one time Pluto will ever come close to Neptune. This assertion has been discussed in many forums bearing in mind that their orbit intersects. Gravitational resonance is the condition that prevents Pluto and Neptune from colliding.
The planets that are smaller than Venus are: Jupiter, Earth, Neptune, Uranus, and Saturn. Pluto is no longer on the list
I do not understand your question, but I can tell you that Neptune has 13 moons and Pluto has 3.
Many asteroids have an eccentric orbit, that is, the orbit's ellipse is very stretched. Pluto is just one of many planetoids with this characteristic.
its not, Pluto is much smaller than the earth. By volume, Pluto is less than 0.6% of Earths volume.
It isn't. Jupiter is 11.2 times the size of Earth, while Neptune is 3.8 times the size of Earth. Jupiter is 2.5 times the mass of all the other planets in our Solar System combined.
According to the astronauts, there is a very small chance that at one time Pluto will ever come close to Neptune. This assertion has been discussed in many forums bearing in mind that their orbit intersects. Gravitational resonance is the condition that prevents Pluto and Neptune from colliding.
2. Jupiter and Pluto. BTW, Neptune is not a greek god, he is roman. The greek god for Neptune is Poseiden.
Zero trips pluto is a gass ball that orbits neptune actually pluto is no longer in orbit and is no longer a planet
It is true that Pluto is in Neptune's neighborhood, but there are many smaller objects around the orbits of the other planets as well. One idea is that those other objects are under the gravitational influence of the much larger planets, and are in place because of this gravitational influence. Pluto is locked with Neptune's gravity; for every three orbits of Neptune, there are two orbits of Pluto, and this is not coincidental. Since it is the powerful gravity of Neptune that keeps this dance in motion, Pluto is not an object of debris that Neptune must clear before taking the category of 'planet'. In a sense, one could argue that any planet with a moon is not a planet because the moon is obviously an object that has not been cleared from the planet's orbit. But moons are really gravitationally and in some cases tidally locked with their parent planets, and therefore do not classify as debris.
In the solar system, that planet is Neptune. Actually no, it's Pluto. Lying in what is known as the Kuiper Belt, it is 7.4 billion km away from the Sun at it's furthest point of orbit, and was discovered in 1930 by the astronomer Clyde W. Tombaugh. So, is the right answer "Neptune" or "Pluto"? I say it's Neptune because Pluto was "demoted" to "dwarf planet" status in 2006. Pluto is not considered a true planet now by most astronomers.
62 moons orbit Saturn, 67 orbit Jupiter, 5 orbit Pluto, 14 orbit Neptune, and 27 orbit Uranus.
Many things, you need to be more specific.