Pluto – The Forgotten Planet?
The little world at the edge of our solar system.
By: James Fite | January 28, 2026 | 676 Words
(Photo by: Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
How many planets are in our solar system, and what is the one farthest out? The answers may reveal your age, because things changed after Aug. 24, 2006. On that day, the answers became eight – and Neptune is the last. But for more than 75 years, there was a ninth planet – Pluto. That tiny dwarf planet is still out there, though, no matter what the modern scientific community says.
Poor Pluto
This tiny planet is smaller than Mercury and the farthest from its neighbor. As such, it was simply impossible to spot with ancient telescopes.
But its presence was clear. Astronomers could tell something big was affecting the orbits of both Uranus and Neptune. Just as Neptune was originally discovered mathematically before it was ever found by telescope, so, too, was Pluto.
In 1930 – about 15 years too late to be included in English composer Gustav Holst’s The Planets symphony – Clyde Tombaugh discovered what would for almost 75 years be known as the ninth planet. Despite being discovered long after anyone believed the planets might be gods, the new planet was still named Pluto in that tradition, honoring the Roman god of the underworld.
But by late 2006, Pluto had lost its planethood. The International Astronomical Union decided during its General Assembly that year in Prague, Czech Republic, to demote Pluto to a dwarf planet.
This happened because the organization changed the definition of planet so that any object labeled planet has to have cleared its orbit. Pluto is in the Kuiper Belt, a region of debris out past Neptune. It shares this space with thousands of objects, including another dwarf planet close in size called Eris.
A Planet on the Edge
Pluto is about 3.6 billion miles away from the sun – or roughly 40 times farther than Earth is. Its home, the Kuiper Belt, is a huge ring of icy objects out beyond Neptune. Some scientists even believe that Pluto might not have formed the same way the rest of the planets and is, instead, a “captured” object hurtling through space that got trapped by the sun’s gravity.
The dwarf planet is less than half the size of Mercury and just two-thirds the size of Earth’s moon. Pluto’s diameter, 1,473 miles, is slightly shorter than the drive from Boston, MA, to Miami, FL! Pluto is believed to be a rocky core surrounded by a mantle of ice and a surface of frozen nitrogen, methane, and carbon monoxide.
It takes 248 Earth years for Pluto to make one full trip around the sun and almost six-and-a-half Earth days to make a single revolution. Pluto has five moons: Charon, Nix, Styx, Kerberos, and Hydra. The largest, Charon, is about half the size of the dwarf planet, and they’re tidally locked together, meaning Charon hovers around the same spot on Pluto.
This little planetoid also has a more oval orbit than any other major body in the system; at some points, it’s even closer to the sun than Neptune! But don’t worry, even though they do cross paths, their orbits are timed so that they’re never both at that intersection at the same time.
The surface of Pluto has mountains, valleys, plains, and craters, though impacts are very rare. Still, the surface is far from a safe environment, as temperatures can drop to negative 400 degrees Fahrenheit. But we have sent a probe out to Pluto. Launched in 2006, the NASA’s New Horizons made its historic flyby and took high-resolution photos in 2015. The whole trip took about nine-and-a-half years. There aren’t any plans for manned trips to Pluto, but who knows? Perhaps someday the dwarf planet that used to be our number nine may be the last stop on the first deep space mission.

- Discovered in 1930, Pluto was considered the ninth planet in the solar system until 2006.
- Pluto lost its planet status because of its size and the fact that it doesn’t clear its orbit of other bodies in space.
- After nine-and-a-half years, NASA’s New Horizons made a flyby and sent back the first high-resolution images of Pluto in 2015.

















