While we can barely detect that Eris exists (much less see if it has any craters) I would be surprised if it does not have any craters. So far, every body with a solid surface has craters. Except Venus, and I think that the reason we haven't seen craters on Venus is the fact that the atmosphere of Venus is an impenetrable haze.
Craters on the moon are not volcanic, they are impact craters.
The large indentation on the surface of the moon areÊcalled craters. It is a circular depression in the surface of the moon and other solid body in the solar system.Ê
craters
they are called craters.
yes defintaly
Yes, there are craters on the Moon. Any planet with a solid surface and not too much of an atmosphere will have craters.
Probably not. Space probes indicate that the surface of Triton is mostly free of craters, indicating a "young" surface, which reforms itself when impact craters form. Triton's "ice volcanoes" would also make footing dangerous, and the surface probably would not hold you against even the weak gravity of Triton.
Mercury has no rings, but it does have a bunch of craters.
Uranus does not have any craters. It has no solid surface.
yes the moon has lots of craters from asteroids and other metoers
Saturn does not have any craters. It is a gas planet and therefore does not have a solid surface.
Triton isn't in any gas giant. It orbits the planet Neptune.
No. The craters on Mercury are from the impacts of comets and asteroids, as are most craters on objects in space. We do not have any strong evidence of volcanic activity on Mercury.
yes
The inner planets all have craters on them. Only Earth has any life that we know of.
Triton had only daughters who were named, his sons - if any - were grouped and their names forgotten for the most part.