Yes. There is one or several active volcanoes on Venus, there may be on Mercury (Mercury is being mapped close-up for the first time as we speak), there is one enormous extinct volcano on Mars (Olympus Mons) and there are several satellites among the Jovian planets that have active volcanoes. Some of them are much different than the volcanoes on earth. It is believed there are volcanoes on the Saturnalian satellite Titan that erupt liquid ethane.
Found planets and satellites.
In the solar system, we have a star, planets, dwarf planets, asteroids, comets, meteors, and human debris. (such as old satellites, probes, etc.)
you can only find volcanoes on the inner planets: that are Venus, mercury and mars
Yes, shield volcanoes can be found on other planets. For example, shield volcanoes have been identified on Mars, Venus, and even some of Jupiter's moons. These volcanoes typically have broad, low-profile shapes due to the flowing nature of their lava.
No natural satellites of the planets Mercury or Venus have ever been discovered.
Moons can be found orbiting planets within our solar system and other planetary systems. They are natural satellites that range in size from small asteroid-like bodies to larger planets like Jupiter. Some moons, such as Earth's moon, are large enough to have their own gravitational pull.
Three types of bodies in the solar system besides dwarf planets, asteroids, and planets are comets, moons, and meteoroids. Comets are icy bodies that release gas and dust as they orbit the Sun, moons are natural satellites that orbit planets or asteroids, and meteoroids are small rocky or metallic bodies that travel through space.
It's impossible to answer this question. We don't even know how many volcanoes there are in the solar system. I'm not sure we know exactly how many volcanoes there are on Earth.
Volcanoes can be caused by mantle plumes. These so-called hotspots can occur far from plate boundaries. Hotspot volcanoes are also found elsewhere in the solar system, especially on rocky planets and moons. Volcanoes can also form where there is stretching and thinning of the Earth's crust.
inner planets and gas giants
Terrestrial planets and jovian planets are both types of planets found in our solar system. They are made up of different materials - terrestrial planets have solid surfaces predominantly made of rock and metal, while jovian planets are primarily composed of gas and liquids. Both types of planets orbit a star and have moons or natural satellites.
mars and uranus