No, some planets have several moons, whilst many have no moons at all.
because each planet has there own moon DER
The moon is not a planet; it is a natural satellite. If it had its own orbit around the sun it would be considered a terrestrial planet.
Mercury
There is no planet in the solar system which has more water than earth. Europa (a moon of the planet Jupiter) is thought to have a liquid ocean under a mantel of ice, but this moon is no larger than our own moon.
Europa is a moon of the planet Jupiter.Europa is a moon of the planet Jupiter.Europa is a moon of the planet Jupiter.Europa is a moon of the planet Jupiter.
because each planet has there own moon DER
Yes. Each moon revolves around its own planet. Our Moon revolves around Earth.
No. The moon is not a planet; it is a moon. If it had its own orbit around the sun it would be considered a terrestrial planet.
That depends on which moon you are talking about. Most likely, if you are just talking about "the Moon," it is our own planet Earth.
The moon is not a planet; it is a natural satellite. If it had its own orbit around the sun it would be considered a terrestrial planet.
That depends on which moon you are talking about. Most likely, if you are just talking about "the Moon," it is our own planet Earth.
No. The sun is a star, not a planet. The moon is a moon. If it had its own orbit around the sun it would be considered a terrestrial planet.
no it wasent it was its own planet.
There is a "Herschel Crater" on our own Moon; on Mimas; and on the planet Mars.
Mercury
Uranus
There is no such planet known. In our solar system, the planet whose moon is closest in size to the planet which it orbits is none other than our own planet Earth. However, the Moon is still much smaller than the Earth. Pluto has a Moon that's big, but Pluto isn't a "planet" now, of course.