asteroids with moons, a parent planet's strong gravitational tug would make it difficult for a moon to retain control of its own natural satellite
mercury has no moons
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.
Jupiter's moons do not have moons. No moon in the Solar System has a moon orbiting it.
there no moons on saturn but yes it does have 61 moons
The Earth has one natural moon, called "The Moon," and hundreds of artificial moons, called "man-made satellites."
Moons are given names so that we can know which moon to which planet one is talking about. The word moon comes from a Greek word meaning month.
I will assume you mean "why do the moons of planets rotate?" this is because the moon has mascons (mass concentrations). these mascons are attracted by the planet more than the rest of the moon, so these parts of the moon always face towards the planet, meaning that the moon rotates
No. It is a moon of Mars. The Galilean moons are moons of Jupiter.
The biggest moon is "Ganymede" which is a moon of Jupiter.
So called Super Moons are when the moon is closer to the Earth than usual. There is no correlation between the distance of the Earth to the Moon and earthquakes.
a sattelite is a moon so therefore Europa doesnt have any moons because it is a moon.
No it does not have moons