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Pluto is the ninth, or last, planet in the solar
system. The orbit, or path the planet takes around our Sun is an
ellipse, or stretched out circle. For this reason there are times when
Pluto is the furthest away from the Sun.
There are also times when it
is closer to the Sun than Neptune. Right now, Pluto is the furthest
planet.
Pluto is a very long way from the Sun. Its average
distance from the Sun is over 3.5 billion
(3,500,000,000) miles.
The closest Pluto gets to the Sun
is over 2.7 billion (2,700,000,000) miles, and the furthest away
it gets is over 4.5 billion (4,500,000,000) miles. |
From Pluto, the Sun is not much
brighter than any other star. Not only is Pluto a very long way from
the Sun, but its orbit is tilted. If you could look at our solar
system from an "edge", most of the planets would be on a
line like a table top, with the Sun being in the middle. This line,
also called a plane, is the ecliptic, and the rest of the planets'
orbits stay on this line. Pluto's orbit, though is tilted at an angle
to the rest of the solar system.
Picture
of pluto
Since Pluto is so far away from the Sun, one of its years, which is
the time it takes for the planet to go around the Sun once, is a very
long time. A year on Pluto lasts for 248 Earth years! A day on Pluto,
which is the length of time it takes for the planet to spin around
once, is also longer than a day here on Earth. It takes Pluto over six
Earth days to spin around once. Pluto is also one of the planets that
spins around in the opposite direction from Earth. This means that the
dim Sun would rise in the West and set in the East.
- Can I See It?
- Probably not, even if you have a telescope. Pluto is so tiny, and so
far away, that you will need a telescope that is at least ten inches
in diameter. You will also need to know exactly where to look for it. If there is an observatory close to
where you live, you might be able to see it through their telescope.
Even if you can find the planet, it will be nothing more than a
pinpoint of light among the stars.
- How Big Is It?
- Pluto is the smallest planet in our solar system at a little over
1,300 miles in diameter, or about one-sixth the diameter of Earth. Put
another way, if Earth was the size of a basketball, Pluto would be the
size of a ping-pong ball. Many of the moons of other planets,
including our very own Moon, are larger than Pluto.
- How Many Moons Does It Have?
- Pluto has one tiny moon, named Charon, that wasn't discovered until
1978. Charon is half the size of Pluto. No other moon in the solar
system is as large, when compared to its mother planet, as Charon.
Pluto and Charon are so similar in size that some astronomers think of
them as a double planet.
- How Did It Get Its Name?
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Pluto was discovered in 1930 by astronomer Clyde Tombaugh. After
Neptune was discovered, astronomers noticed that something was
changing the orbits of Uranus and Neptune and decided that there must
be another undiscovered planet that was causing these changes. Mr.
Tombaugh spent a long time taking photographs of the area of the sky
where the unknown planet should be and finally discovered Pluto in one
of the photographs. Pluto is the Roman god of darkness and the
underworld. Perhaps Pluto got its name because it is always in
darkness. It may have also gotten its name from the fact that its
symbol "PL" are the initials of Percival Lowell, who founded
the observatory where Mr. Tombaugh worked.
- What Is It Made Of?
- Pluto is the only planet in our solar system that we have not
explored with a spacecraft. What we know about the dark, frozen world
is the result of many years of work by dedicated scientists here on
Earth. The current studies tell us that Pluto is made up of a mixture
of rocks and several kinds of "ices". Scientists believe
that most of the ices that make up Pluto are frozen methane and
ammonia.
- What's It Like On The Surface?
- The surface of Pluto is very dark and extremely cold. Since the
planet is so far away from the Sun, it gets almost no light or heat.
Scientists believe that the temperature on the surface of the ninth
planet over over four hundred degrees Fahrenheit below zero. At this
low temperature, almost everything freezes solid. Scientists here on
Earth have determined that Pluto does have a very thin atmosphere, but
it is far too thin to support any kind of life.
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