No. Pluto has 5 moons. Jupiter has 63 confirmed moons as of 2017.
No, the latest estimates are 5 moons for Pluto and over 60 each for Jupiter and Saturn.
Jupiter has 63 known natural satellites (with a 64th and more possible as of 2008). Saturn has 60 or more, Uranus 27 or more, Neptune 13 currently known, and Pluto has three confirmed moons (the largest, Charon, is nearly the same size as Pluto).
Four of the moons of Jupiter (Ganymede, Callisto, Io, and Europa) are larger than Pluto, but there are only 7 moons in this solar system that are larger than Pluto.
It is not impossible but Pluto has very much less gravity than Jupiter which means it does not have the muscle to pull in stray bits of junk and make them moons.
The seven moons that are larger than Pluto are Ganymede (Jupiter), Titan (Saturn), Callisto (Jupiter), Io (Jupiter), Earth's Moon (Earth), Europa (Jupiter), and Triton (Neptune).
None no planets have more moons than jupiter and jupiter has atleast 63 moons more than any other planet
WHICH PLANET has for of its 16 moons are larger than pluto
In order of largest first and planet they orbit in brackets.Ganymede (Jupiter)Callisto (Jupiter)Titan (Saturn)Io (Jupiter)The Moon (Earth)Europa (Jupiter)Triton (Neptune)See related link for more information.
I do not understand your question, but I can tell you that Neptune has 13 moons and Pluto has 3.
Jupiter has 79 known moons, while Mars has 2. Therefore, Jupiter has 77 more moons than Mars.
The "surface" gravity of Jupiter is about 40 times that of Pluto.
Saturn is the planet with the most moons in our solar system, having more than 80 moons. Another planet with more than 16 moons is Jupiter, which has over 50 moons. These moons vary in size and composition, with some being as small as a few kilometers across and others as large as our own Moon.