No. Pluto has 5 moons. Jupiter has 63 confirmed moons as of 2017.
No, it does not.
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.
None no planets have more moons than jupiter and jupiter has atleast 63 moons more than any other planet
* Jupiter, 63 moons * Saturn, 61 moons plus over 100 moonlets* Uranus, 27 moons
no
Ganymede and Titan, which are moons of Jupiter and Saturn respectively, are larger than the planet Mercury. These are the only moons larger than any planets in our solar system. It is also worth noting that Jupiter's moons Callisto, Io, and Europa; Earth's moon; and Neptune's moon Triton are larger than Pluto, but Pluto is no longer considered a planet.
Yes, Jupiter and Saturn each of 60 some moons, while Uranus and Neptune have around twenty. The dwarf planet Pluto has three moons.
Yes, Jupiter and Saturn each of 60 some moons, while Uranus and Neptune have around twenty. The dwarf planet Pluto has three moons.
Jupiter has 63 Moons, Mars has two.
No planet has any moons as large as the earth.