Mars has two moons, a number of volcanoes, impact craters, mountains, and dust storms. It does not have rings.
I think so, the clouds on Venus have been known to produce lightning.
Craters - No. Storms - Yes. Hurricanes - These are storms. Volcanoes - No. Floods - No. Neptune is a gas giant, which means it is made of gas and has no solid surface. Without a surface it is impossible for impact craters and volcanoes to form. There are no floods on the planet because there is no water. It will be impossible for Neptune to hold water because it has no surface to flow on and it is absolutely freezing. Neptune is the stormiest planet discovered so far. Winds average 750mph, with storms recorded to be as fast as 1,200mph.
none, there is no atmosphere, and thus no winds, storms, or other weather- related spectacles... There are dead volcanoes, and lots of craters. That's about it
Some prominent landmarks on the Moon include impact craters like Tycho and Copernicus, as well as the large flat regions known as maria, such as the Sea of Tranquility and the Ocean of Storms. Other notable features are lunar mountains like the Apennine Mountains and rilles like the Vallis Schröteri.
Mars is a dynamic planet because it has a very robust weather system. There are ice clouds, dust storms, volcanoes and craters.
An interesting feature of Mars is that there are volcanoes on its surface. There are also different types of erosion, canyons, and dust storms.
Yes, on certain expeditions to Venus in the past several decades, evidence has been found proving that there has been volcanic activity on the planet. However, there are several large dormant volcanoes on the surface, so future volcanic activity can be expected.
Uranus has storms but not volcanoes. Uranus is a gas giant, so there is no solid surface on which volcanoes might form.
No, but it has Sun Flares
Theres no storms, rain or anything that effects it so it retains the craters no weather to destroy the craters.
Mars has volcanoes and the biggest volcano in the whole solar system. There are storms too.
Snow storms in the Appalachian Mountains and the Rocky Mountains form when moist air is forced to rise over the mountains, leading to cooling and condensation of water vapor into snow. The moisture for these storms can come from nearby bodies of water, such as the Atlantic Ocean for the Appalachian Mountains and the Pacific Ocean for the Rocky Mountains.