A few planets have more than 15 moons. Take Jupiter, which has at least 63 of them. Saturn has 60 known moons, while Uranus has 27.
I'm reading a 1987 book of date that says: Jupiter has at least 16, Saturn: 23 and Uranus, 15.
None in our solar system have exactly 15 moons, Neptune comes closest with 13 moons.
No planet in our solar system has 15 known moons. However, Neptune has 14 known moons. Jupiter has the highest number of moons at 67, while Mercury and Venus have none.
The following all have rings.
* Jupiter - 63 Moons * Saturn - 61 Moons * Uranus - 27 Moons * Neptune - 13 moons
Jupiter, Saturn, and Uranus all have more than 15 moons.
Planet Neptune has 13 moons. That is as close to 15 as there is in the Solar system.
Pluto
Saturn
None of the planets have 7 moons.Mercury - 0Venus - 0Earth - 1Mars - 2Jupiter - 62Saturn - 33Uranis - 27Neptune - 13Pluto - 1http://www.spacetoday.org/SolSys/Moons/MoonsSolSys.html
Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune and Uranus all have more than ten moons.
These are only the moons that we know of, there are many smaller moons around Jupiter, Uranus and Neptune that haven't been discovered yet. Here are the number of moons that each planet has: Mercury: 0 Venus: 0 Earth: 1 Mars: 2 Jupiter: 16 Saturn: 62 Uranus: 15 Neptune: 8 Pluto: 1 ----
Jupiter. It's rotation is a little less than ten Earth hours.
1) Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar system. 2) You can fit 1,321 Earths inside Jupiter. 3) Jupiter is the fastest spinning planet in the Solar System. 4) The clouds on Jupiter are only 50 km thick. 5) Jupiter's magnetic field is 14 times as strong as Earth. 6) Jupiter has 63 moons. 7) Jupiter has been visited 7 times by spacecraft from Earth. 8) Jupiter is twice as heavy as all of the other seven planets added together. 9) Jupiter was named after 'Jupiter', the king of Roman gods. 10) Jupiter has the shortest day in the Solar System, extending up to only 10 hours.
Mercury has no moons nor rings.
URANUS
Uranus is the planet that has ten moons. The moons lie closer to the planet's surface than any other planet.
None of the planets have 7 moons.Mercury - 0Venus - 0Earth - 1Mars - 2Jupiter - 62Saturn - 33Uranis - 27Neptune - 13Pluto - 1http://www.spacetoday.org/SolSys/Moons/MoonsSolSys.html
Fifteen ten-thousandths as a decimal is 0.0015
Saturn has 62 moons.
Ten Million Moons was created on 2009-05-19.
Fifteen ten thousandths
The number [ 0.0015 ] is fifteen ten-thousandths.
no you have to do it in the order of operationBODM Division and Multiplication are equalAS
Fifteen ten thousandths (0.0015) in standard form is 1.5 × 10-3
Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune and Uranus all have more than ten moons.