No. Many moons of planets in the solar system are unique in many ways. Some are rocky and barren like our moon , but some are icy and some are covered with frozen methane.
No! No two are alike. Every one is different.
They are alike because their climate are both cold.
Mercury does not have a moon.
Not sure what you mean by this. All the moons in space are moons.
The inner and outer planets are alike in that they are all part of our solar system and orbit around the Sun. They also have varying sizes and compositions, with the inner planets being smaller and rocky while the outer planets are larger and gaseous. Additionally, they all have moons, but the outer planets tend to have more and larger moons compared to the inner planets.
Most but not all larger MOONS (bodies that orbit planets, moons, or asteroids) accreted in the same way that PLANETS did, assuming a variable density and a nearly spherical shape. Very large moons such as Titan have many of the characteristics of planets: vulcanism, atmospheres, and weather. Generally speaking, moons orbit planets in the same way that planets orbit stars.
They do. Six of the eight planets in the solar system have moons and five of them have large moons. If you are asking why no planet has moons exactly like those of Jupiter, each moon has its own unique history, often interacting with its neighboring moons. So no two moons are alike.
Both asteroids and moons can be rocky. An asteroid orbits the Sun while a moon orbits a planet. Mars has two moons (Deimos and Phobos) that are most likely former asteroids.
Both moons and planets are objects in space that orbit a larger body.
They are Both created by the moons gravitational pull on the earth
All of them have moons.
No, Mercury and Venus do not have moons.