the correct term for pluto is "dwarf planet".
Uranus then Neptune are before the dwarf planet Pluto. That is the correct order from the Sun, too. :-), Ri
In 2006 the Astronomical Union defined 'planet' and the definition excluded Pluto. At the same time they created the term dwarf planet into which Pluto fell.
That is correct. Pluto is so very far away that we can't see it well on a telescope to see what the ground looks like.
Pluto was reclassified as a "dwarf planet" by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) in 2006. This decision was based on the introduction of a formal definition of what constitutes a planet, which Pluto did not fully meet. Since then, it has been referred to as a "dwarf planet" rather than a "plutiod." The term "plutiod" is used to describe a category of objects similar to Pluto, but it is not the classification of Pluto itself.
The decision to classify Pluto as a dwarf planet was based on updated definitions of a planet by the International Astronomical Union in 2006. Pluto did not meet all the criteria for a planet, such as clearing its orbit of debris, hence it was reclassified as a dwarf planet.
The correct order from smallest to largest is Pluto, Mars, Jupiter. Pluto is the smallest, followed by Mars, and then Jupiter, which is the largest of the three.
That is correct it is no longer a planet.
Uranus then Neptune are before the dwarf planet Pluto. That is the correct order from the Sun, too. :-), Ri
"Planet X" was originally a term for a hypothetical TENTH planet, BEYOND Pluto. Also, Pluto is no longer considered a planet.
A......circle......yes that is correct.......
No. The definition of the word "planet" has changed. We now have a new term, "dwarf planet", to describe things like Pluto..
In 2006 the Astronomical Union defined 'planet' and the definition excluded Pluto. At the same time they created the term dwarf planet into which Pluto fell.
Planets don't have planets. The Sun has planets, and planets have moons.Dwarf planets might orbit around each other, but this answer uses the correct definition of the term planet, which does not include Pluto or Charon.
When they discovered pluto did not follow the full criteria to be considered a planet. They needed a different scientific term to describe “planets” like pluto.
The correct term is padlock.
Cross multiplication IS the correct term!
Arab is a politically correct term.