I've never seen a book that deals with this question. But I suspect that if the questioner is able to discover an answer some day, the answer will be related somehow to the reasons why Mercury and Venus have no satellites, why Jupiter and Saturn have at least 60 satellites apiece, and why the sun has only eight or nine planets.
No. The earth has one natural satellite ... the moon ... and any number of other satellites whose primary purpose is not scientific (e.g. communication satellites).
The only NATURAL satellite of the Earth is the Moon. There are more than a thousand artificial satellites of the Earth.
One. Luna. the Earth's moon, is the only one.
i meant planet Earth has fewer because Earth has only 1 satellite and Uranus has 27 satellites.
No, Earth only has one natural satellite. All the rest have been made by humans.
If you are refering to natural satellites there is only one and that is the moon. If you are refering to artificial satellites there are heaps. Military, GPS and mobile just to name a few catagorys of satillites. Hope that helped.
Earth has only one natural satellite, the moon. Some call it Luna.
Mars has two natural satellites. Earth has one.
One can find pictures of earth satellites on the NASA Visible Earth online website. NASA Visible Earth is a catalog of NASA images of our home planet, earth. The website "Geology" is where one can also find pictures of earth satellites.
The Earth is one of the Sun's satellites.
As far as is known: -- Neither Mercury nor Venus has any natural satellites. -- Earth has one -- Mars has two
No, Earth is not the only planet in our solar system with natural satellites. Several other planets, including Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, also have natural satellites or moons. For example, Jupiter has over 70 known moons, while Saturn has more than 80. Thus, Earth is just one of many planets with natural satellites.