Venus, both have zero moons.
No. The moons of a planet belong to that planet alone. Of the inner planets, Mercury and Venus have no moons, Earth has one large moon (the moon), and Mars has two small moons named Phobos and Deimos.
Mars, which is a terrestial planet, has two moons. However, Jupiter, which is a gas giant and not terrestial, has at least 14 moons.
No planet! However, Venus has no moons and is not much smaller than Earth.
no. a dwarf planet is a planet that doesnt have the characteristics for being a planet so its counted as a planet, a dwarf planet can have moons, such as Pluto has 3 moons, but a moon cant have a moon, so therefore dwarf planets and moons are diffrent.
No, the planet Mercury is just called Mercury. The element Mercury (Hg) is a chemical element and has nothing to do with the naming of the planet Mercury.
it's almost the same ... but earth's is a little bit more
None is known. No moons of Mercury or Venus have been discovered, Earth has one, and each of the other planets is known to have more than one. 63 are presently known in orbit around Jupiter.
You can't unless you are on Venus . It has 5 moons.
Mercury doesn't "have planets".
Most moons orbit their planet the same way the planet rotates. One of Neptune's moons is very different. That moon goes in the opposite direction of Neptune's rotation.
No, it is an element found in different minerals on earth,the planet has the same name.
A moon is also a satellite. Just to be clear, the only planets that do not have moons are Mercury and Venus. The rest do have moons.