Neptune has 11 moons. That's the nearest, but it has 13 known moons.
Planets with more than 10 moons in order away from the sun: Jupiter with 63, Saturn with 61, Uranus with 27 and Neptune with 13.
Neptune does.
Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus.
The answer is Jupiter. It has 63 moons.It is the gaseous planet and spins around once less than 10 hr. I hope this helps
Jupiter has those, plus at least 48 more satellites.
no, mercury and venus are the only two planets that do not have moons.
The planet Saturn has 53 named moons (not only 23 moons), and another nine which are still being studied.Many of the moons are very small: 33 are less than 10 km in diameter and 13 moons are less than 50 km.Many of the moons are named after Titans, giants, or minor Greek or Roman gods.Some of Saturn's moons are very large; the moon Titan is bigger than the planet Mercury.
Voyager II did not land on Uranus, it has left our solar system.
Yes. Many Planets and dwarf planets have less than 10 moons. Planets: Mercury- 0 moons Venus- 0 moons Earth- 1 moon Mars- 2 moon Neptune- 8 moons Dwarf planets: Pluto- 3 moons and many other dwarf planets that i don't know how many moons they have.
None of them. The only planets with rings are the four outer gas planets, none of them have 15 moons exactly.
None of the planets have 7 moons.Mercury - 0Venus - 0Earth - 1Mars - 2Jupiter - 62Saturn - 33Uranis - 27Neptune - 13Pluto - 1http://www.spacetoday.org/SolSys/Moons/MoonsSolSys.html
For the Earth's Moon (Luna), you could fit 2.8 Moons into the volume of Mercury. Mercury is the smallest of the major planets, and is smaller than the moons Ganymede (Jupiter) and Titan (Saturn). But it is much more dense than either, as many of its lighter elements were dispersed at that close distance to the Sun.
The answer is Jupiter. It has 63 moons.It is the gaseous planet and spins around once less than 10 hr. I hope this helps
The Inner Planets (Mercury, Venus. Earth, and Mars) have many differences between the Outer Planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune), some of the main ones as follows: • All the Inner Planets are terrestrial planets, while the Outer Planets are gaseous planets. • Comparably, the Outer Planets are much bigger than the Inner Planets. • Mars, the Inner Planet with the most moons has no more than 2 moons. However, each of the Outer Planets have at the very least 10 moons each. • The Outer Planets have much longer orbital periods than the Inner Planets, due to the fact that they're further away from the Sun. • Venus, the Inner Planet second closest to the Sun, has extremely hot temperature conditions (an average of 870 F or 450 C), but the Outer Planets have very cold weather, all in negative degrees of at least -240 F or -150 C. Also, Venus is the hottest planet, and Uranus is the coldest one.
10 -------- Jupiter has 67 known moons in orbit.
there is no answer for this Question (i wouldn't want to be you right now) But Uranus has more than 10 rings and 15 moons!
The Jovian planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune) are composed of gases and pressurized liquids. Whereas, the four terrestrial planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars) are composed of rock and iron.
the planets evolve the sun by gravity creating years. the earth spins round creating days. by lewis David Gorton age 10 Colne 10 of November Thursday 2011
Jupiter has those, plus at least 48 more satellites.
no, mercury and venus are the only two planets that do not have moons.