Titan and Ganymede are both larger (but less massive) than Mercury and could certainly be called planets if they qualified under the IAU criteria. The conditions include a requirement that they orbit the Sun, and not Saturn or Jupiter, respectively, which currently make them moons, not true planets. They would further need to have cleared their orbits if they were in solar orbit.
The planet that has a moon named Titan is Saturn.
No. Titan is a moon of Saturn.
Titan is not a planet. It is a moon of Saturn. It is yellowish brown.
No. Titan is not a planet; it is one of the moons of Saturn. It is not newly discovered either; it was first observed in 1655.
Titan is a moon of Saturn. It is a rocky moon.
Titan orbits the planet Saturn.
Titan is larger than Mercury, but Titan is a moon, not a planet.
Mercury is smaller than Titan, but Titan is a moon, not a planet.
No. Titan orbits the planet Saturn, which makes it a moon.
The planet that has a moon named Titan is Saturn.
Titan Orbits Saturn because its one of its moons, so say if Saturn was earth and titan was the moon, the moon would orbit the earth.
No. Titan is a moon of Saturn.
Titan is not a planet; it is a moon of Saturn. It was discovered by Christiaan Huygens in 1655.
Saturn has a moon named Titan.
Titan is the largest satellite of the planet Saturn.
Titan is the largest satellite of the planet Saturn.
Titan is not a planet. It is a moon of Saturn. It is yellowish brown.