From the distance of Pluto, the Sun would look like a very bright star.
ask the tv dude only science knows that answer.
The sun would look much smaller than it does from Earth but still bright.
It would be no brighter than some planets as seen from Earth : brighter than the other stars but not much larger. Since Pluto is so far away from the sun (at a average distance of 3,670,050,000 miles), the sun would look much dimmer and smaller that it does from here on Earth. From Pluto, the sun would look like a very bright star and would light up Pluto during the day about as much as the full moon lights up Earth at night.
There is no confirmed evidence of vegetation on Pluto as it is an icy dwarf planet located far from the Sun with extremely low temperatures. The surface of Pluto is mainly composed of ices like nitrogen and methane rather than plant life.
The average temperature on the surface of Pluto is around -375 degrees Fahrenheit (-225 degrees Celsius). Pluto is located very far from the sun, resulting in extremely cold temperatures on its surface.
Pluto is in the milky way solar system that is furthest away from the sun. The surface of Pluto is comprised of methane gas, nitrogen, and carbon monoxide.
ask the tv dude only science knows that answer.
When Pluto is closer to the Sun in its orbit, the warmth from the Sun heats up the frozen ices of nitrogen, methane and carbon monoxide on Pluto's surface. These ices vaporize and form a temporary atmosphere. When Pluto moves farther from the Sun, the atmosphere freezes and falls back onto Pluto's surface.
Pluto's atmosphere consists of a very thin surface of methane, nitrogen, and carbon monoxide, made from the ice on its surface. As Pluto moves away from the Sun, its atmosphere gradually freezes and falls to the ground. As it gets closer to the Sun, the temperature of Pluto's surface increases, causing the ice to turn into gas. This creates an "anti greenhouse" effect cooling the surface of Pluto.
Solid. Pluto is composed primarily of rock and ice, and since it is cold that far from the sun, even the ice is a solid surface.
No, Pluto is too far away from the Sun, meaning if therer was ever water on pluto, it would be ice. as far as I know, there isn't any water on Pluto
The sun would look much smaller than it does from Earth but still bright.
Pluto is one of the coldest celestial bodies, with an average surface temperature of -380 F. Pluto is 30 to 50 times the Earth's distance from the sun.
Images of Pluto, captured by the Hubble Space Telescope have shown that Pluto's surface isn't just pure ice. Instead, it has a dirty yellow color, with darker and brighter regions across its surface. Hubble studied the entire surface of Pluto as it rotated through a 6.4 day period. This included a "ragged" northern polar cap cut in half by a dark strip, a bright spot seen to rotate around the dwarf planet, and a cluster of dark spots.The surface area of Pluto is 1.795 x 107 square kilometers; about 0.033% the surface area of Earth. When Pluto is furthest away from the Sun, gases like nitrogen, carbon monoxide and methane partially freeze onto its surface. Source: http://www.universetoday.com/13901/surface-of-pluto/
It would be no brighter than some planets as seen from Earth : brighter than the other stars but not much larger. Since Pluto is so far away from the sun (at a average distance of 3,670,050,000 miles), the sun would look much dimmer and smaller that it does from here on Earth. From Pluto, the sun would look like a very bright star and would light up Pluto during the day about as much as the full moon lights up Earth at night.
There is no confirmed evidence of vegetation on Pluto as it is an icy dwarf planet located far from the Sun with extremely low temperatures. The surface of Pluto is mainly composed of ices like nitrogen and methane rather than plant life.
Pluto only orbits one Sun, our Sun, the same one we orbit.