Moons revolve around planets, not the Sun. Planets revolve around the Sun.
All of them have moons.
The planets that make part of the solar system move around the Sun. The huge gravity power of the Sun maintain all planets and moons orbiting around it on an elliptical form.
The gas planets have more moons. Of all the gas planets non has fewer than 14 moons. Of the rocky planets, none has more than two. Mercury and Venus have none at all.
If you count in pluto, there are 135 moons. If not, there are 134 moons.
Moons revolve around planets, not the Sun. Planets revolve around the Sun.
The sun and all of the bodies that circle around it including planets and moons make up the solar system.
All except Mercury and Venus.
Because the moons are the ones revolvimg around the planets (only some planets have moons, not all). And besides, moons aren't in the center of the solar system. They're even smaller than the planets.
All of them have moons.
Yes, all the outer planets have at least a dozen moons.
All planets moons revolve around their planet, no matter how many moons the planet has. Mars' moons, Phobos and Deimos, mean fear and terror.
The Ptolemaic model has all of the planets moons and stars moving around the Sun. The modern day Copernican model has all the planets moving around the Sun, with the moons moving around the planets, and the Sun and its "system" moving around the Milky Way.
No, Mercury and Venus do not have moons.
Yes. Planets and moons come in all sizes and colors.
The sun has 8 or 9 major planets and thousands of smaller objects orbiting around it. Some of the planets have many moons. (eg Neptune has 13) It can have moons but so far all of the moons are to close to the planets to get caught in the sun's orbit.
The four outer planets have many moons each, while the inner planets only have three between all of the, two for Mars and one in orbit around the Earth. The planet with the most is Jupiter, with 63 confirmed moons.