Pluto
Datos del Objeto
- Designación del Catálogo
- Pluto
- Tipo
- DwarfPlanet
- Constelación
- Solar System
- Magnitud
- 14.0
- Distancia
- 5,906,123,935 años luz
- Tamaño Angular
- 0.1
Acerca de Pluto
Descripción
Pluto is the largest known dwarf planet in the Kuiper Belt, orbiting el Sol at an average distance of 39.5 AU. With a diameter of 2,376 km — about two-thirds the size of Earth's Moon — Pluto is a small, icy world composed of roughly 70% rock and 30% water ice, with a surface covered in nitrogen, methane, and carbon monoxide ices. Its most striking surface feature is Tombaugh Regio (informally 'the Heart'), a vast heart-shaped plain of nitrogen ice roughly 1,000 km across. Pluto has five known moons, the largest being Charon (1,212 km diameter), which is so large relative to Pluto that the two are sometimes considered a sistema binario — they orbit a common center of gravity that lies between them in space.
Consejos de Observación
At magnitude 14.0, Pluto is a challenging but achievable target for experienced amateur astronomers. You need at least a 10-inch telescopio under cielos oscuros, a detailed star chart, and patience — Pluto appears as nothing more than a faint star indistinguishable from its surroundings. The key technique is to sketch or photograph the field on two or more nights and look for the one 'star' that has moved. A go-to telescopio with accurate pointing helps enormously. CCD imaging makes the task much easier than visual observation. Pluto currently moves through the rich star fields of Sagittarius, which makes identification more difficult due to the dense stellar background. Even in the largest amateur telescopios, Pluto shows no disk — only its motion reveals its planetary nature.
Historia
Pluto was descubierto por Clyde Tombaugh at Lowell Observatory on February 18, 1930, after a systematic photographic search motivated by Percival Lowell's prediction of a 'Planet X.' It was considered the ninth planet for 76 years until the International Astronomical Union reclassified it as a dwarf planet in 2006, following the discovery of similar-sized Kuiper Belt objects like Eris. NASA's New Horizons spacecraft flew past Pluto on July 14, 2015, returning stunning images that revealed a geologically complex and surprisingly active world — nitrogen glaciers, mountains of water ice, and a thin but dynamic atmosphere.
Datos Curiosos
Pluto's orbit is so elliptical that it actually comes closer to el Sol than Neptune for 20 years of its 248-year orbit (it was closer from 1979 to 1999). Pluto and Charon are tidally locked to each other — each always shows the same face to the other, making them the only known mutually tidally locked pair in the sistema solar. Despite being classified as a dwarf planet, Pluto has a more complex geology than many full-sized planets, with evidence of cryovolcanism and a possible subsurface ocean.
Fotos de la Comunidad (1)
Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute/Alex Parker. License: Public domain. (Wikimedia Commons)
Skybred Feb 28, 2026