they are: sun, mercury, venus, earth, mars, jupiter, saturn, uranus, neptune and pluto
Equatorial surface gravity: 0.58 m/s² (0.059 gees) aka. just over 1\2 of our's
No, because Pluto is not considered a planet by the scientific community.
There is only one factor that makes Pluto different from major planets:Pluto has not cleared its "neighborhood" of asteroids and debris.
Pluto is farther from the sun than any of the 8 major planets. There are other dwarf planets farther from the sun than Pluto though.
saturn earth jupiter pluto
It is not the dominant object in the neighbourhood of its orbit.
Pluto is no longer considered a planet by major astronomers. It has been reclassified as a Kuiper Belt object- a sort of secondary asteroid belt among the outer planets, not the one between Jupiter and Mars. as such it is no longer a planet.
Pluto was considered a major planet from 1930 to 2006.
They have focus groups trying to figure out how to get Earth off the list of major planets.
It fails to qualify under the new definition of a planet, because it is not the dominant object in the neighbourhood of its orbit.
Neptune is the farthest planet from the sun. Pluto's orbit is sometimes farther out, but Pluto is no longer considered a planet.
Actually, it's now eight, after scientists have decided that Pluto is not a planet, but a "dwarf planet". So the remaining eight in order from the Sun are as follows: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune. Or in an acronym way to remember, My Very Educated Mother Just Served Us Noodles.
they are: sun, mercury, venus, earth, mars, jupiter, saturn, uranus, neptune and pluto
Equatorial surface gravity: 0.58 m/s² (0.059 gees) aka. just over 1\2 of our's
the answer is fat
Pluto's major moon is Charon. Its minor moons are Nix and Hydra.