Not yet, but, as we have discovered water on various planets and moon, the possibility of life - as we know it - does exist.
yes moons are satellites to other planets
Only Mars has two moons. The other planets have either one moon, no moons, or many moons.
Moons, yes. Life, quite possibly. While every planet is unique, the planets in other solar systems are not so different from the planets in ours so as to not have moons. We have even detected possible evidence of moons, though it is very hard to verify across interstellar distances. Life is somewhat harder as only one known planet (Earth) has life, so we do not know that the probabilities are. We have found planets orbiting other stars which may be in the right temperature range to support life, but we can't actually tell if they can.
Its unlikely that all of the moons of the other planets have been found, but certainly all of the major moons have now been discovered. Some of Saturns named moons are only a few km across, so there are likely to be some more moons of this sort of size that have yet to be officially recognised.
Yes. Many Planets and dwarf planets have less than 10 moons. Planets: Mercury- 0 moons Venus- 0 moons Earth- 1 moon Mars- 2 moon Neptune- 8 moons Dwarf planets: Pluto- 3 moons and many other dwarf planets that i don't know how many moons they have.
Galileo
It's backwards. Venus rotates the opposite direction from most other moons and planets.
It's backwards. Venus rotates the opposite direction from most other moons and planets.
The planets that don't have rings or moons are Mercury and Venus. All other planets have either a moon, rings or both.
space rocks ice and another galexy
the inner plants have a total of three moons. our moon, and two moons of mars. Phobos, and Deimos. but the out planets have many more moons. Neptune has the least amount of moons out of all the outer planets. it has 13 moons. but, the other outer planets have way more. Jupiter even has 63. of course, there are probably many more moons still to be discovered. well, not for earth and mars. in total, the outer planets must have at least 100 moons.
It obviously does.