Objects in the Oort cloud have never actually been observed; they are more theoretical that actual at this point. The problem is that they are so far away - hundreds or thousands of AU away - that they are invisible in our current telescopes. This will probably change as telescopes of greater and greater power are developed.
That said, there is no reason why an Oort Cloud object of sufficient size should not have moons. Asteroids have moons; Pluto has three moons. It's just that we haven't seen them yet.
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It has none.
Mercury has no satellites.
No air and no water on the Moon equals no thunderstorms.
Venus actually has NO moons.
true
Beyond our Solar system lie the Kuiper Belt, the Oort Cloud, other stars and their asteroids, planets and their moons, black holes, galaxies, dust clouds, and so forth
No moons.
Oort cloud
Neptune has 13 moons. The largest moon is Triton. :)
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It has none.
no Pluto dose not have clouds because of the atmosphere .
No. Individual planets do not have Oort clouds; we're not even certain that our solar system has one. The Oort cloud is supposed to be the tenuous region of space far beyond the orbit of Neptune, which may (or may not) be where comets come from. Other than the occasional comet, we have no definite proof of the theory.
Mercury has no satellites.
only one durdadur its name is moon
wind dose