Uranus has 27 moons and Neptune has 13 moons
Venus has no moons. Neptune has 14 that are known.
Uranus has 27 moons and Neptune has 13. See related questions for more details.
Uranus has 27 moons while Neptune has 14 moons.
Neptune has 11 moons. That's the nearest, but it has 13 known moons.
There are six planets out of eight that has moon(s). The planets with moon(s) are: Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.
Jupiter: 67 known moons Saturn: 62 Uranus: 27 Neptune: 14
Uranus has 27 moons.
Mars, Jupiter, Neptune and Uranus all have moons. Venus and Mercury do not have moons.
Yes.
62 moons orbit Saturn, 67 orbit Jupiter, 5 orbit Pluto, 14 orbit Neptune, and 27 orbit Uranus.
1 moon for all
Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune and Uranus all have more than ten moons.
Neptune has 11 moons. That's the nearest, but it has 13 known moons.
Jupiter has 63 known natural satellites (with a 64th and more possible as of 2008). Saturn has 60 or more, Uranus 27 or more, Neptune 13 currently known, and Pluto has three confirmed moons (the largest, Charon, is nearly the same size as Pluto).
Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.
Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.
There are six planets out of eight that has moon(s). The planets with moon(s) are: Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.
The largest gas giant in our solar system with multiple moons is Jupiter. Saturn is second, with almost as many moons (around 60), followed by Uranus and Neptune.
These are only the moons that we know of, there are many smaller moons around Jupiter, Uranus and Neptune that haven't been discovered yet. Here are the number of moons that each planet has: Mercury: 0 Venus: 0 Earth: 1 Mars: 2 Jupiter: 16 Saturn: 62 Uranus: 15 Neptune: 8 Pluto: 1 ----
Jupiter 63 known moons, Saturn 60 known moons, Uranus 27 known moons, Neptune 13 known moons and Pluto (no longer classed as a planet) 3 known moons.