The rest needs defining before this question can be answered.
well they all have diffrent amounts
The answer to this question is 'Gravity.' The Sun's gravity causes the rest of the solar system to orbit around it.
None have exactly 59, Jupiter and Saturn both have more than 59; the rest of the planets have less. Jupiter has 63 known moons, and Saturn has 61 .
1. Ganymede is the largest known moon in the solar system. 2. look the rest up on wikipedia (search 4 moons of jupiter)
None of the planets have 7 moons.Mercury - 0Venus - 0Earth - 1Mars - 2Jupiter - 62Saturn - 33Uranis - 27Neptune - 13Pluto - 1http://www.spacetoday.org/SolSys/Moons/MoonsSolSys.html
We don't really know how much water there is in the solar system. Europa, one of Jupiter's 63 moons, might have a tremendous amount of water. Scientists continue to find water; even on our own moon.
In OUR solar system, Earth is the only planet with one moon. Mercury and Venus don't have any moons, Mars has two, and the rest of the planets have more. Jupiter is in the lead, with more than 60 moons, and more still being discovered .
not in our solar system but in the rest of space, maybe yeah.
it effects the solar system because it has a lot of gravity that pushes against it which is bad
Australia has the same number of moons as the rest of the Earth: just one.
The rest of the universe
Not at all, they are part of the solar system. Dwarf planet "Ceres" is in the Asteroid Belt. The rest are beyond Neptune, but within the solar system.