Icy and rocky.
Most of the planets in our solar system, including our own planet Earth, have clouds. They are not necessarily water clouds. Clouds on other planets in the solar system are made of substances such as sulfuric acid, methane, and ammonia.
No. Pluto is a separate planet from Neptune and has its own moon.There is a theory that Pluto was once a moon of Neptune but managed to escape when the solar system was still young.
It's not known for definite, but is generally regared as being rocky, uneven with small mountains and crevasses, and with no atmosphere. It may well harbour masses of ice as well, with frozen wastes of ancient frozen water that are billions of years old. From Pluto, our own Sun would look like a very bright star, so far is it from Earth.
Charon is tidally locked with Pluto, meaning one side always faces the planet. As Pluto rotates, Charon's position relative to the horizon would change. Charon itself does not have its own rotation, so its position in the sky would remain consistent from Pluto's surface.
Pluto is still in the Milky Way Galaxy.
No planet shines on its own. They are just like the moon and have the light reflected off them from the sun.
Most of the planets in our solar system, including our own planet Earth, have clouds. They are not necessarily water clouds. Clouds on other planets in the solar system are made of substances such as sulfuric acid, methane, and ammonia.
Pluto is round. It is massive enough to have been rounded by it own gravity.
no it wasent it was its own planet.
no. Pluto is bigger than charon,its moon. Just remember:moons are alwayssmaller than their planet.
Yes , it is.
no
No. Pluto is a separate planet from Neptune and has its own moon.There is a theory that Pluto was once a moon of Neptune but managed to escape when the solar system was still young.
It's not known for definite, but is generally regared as being rocky, uneven with small mountains and crevasses, and with no atmosphere. It may well harbour masses of ice as well, with frozen wastes of ancient frozen water that are billions of years old. From Pluto, our own Sun would look like a very bright star, so far is it from Earth.
Charon is tidally locked with Pluto, meaning one side always faces the planet. As Pluto rotates, Charon's position relative to the horizon would change. Charon itself does not have its own rotation, so its position in the sky would remain consistent from Pluto's surface.
Pluto is still in the Milky Way Galaxy.
Pluto is a dwarf planet and not a star, so it doesn't generate its own light. It's only visible because it reflects sunlight, just like other planets, dwarf planets, asteroids, and so on.