one but you might want to check your grammar.
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Maybe 4 moons. 1 of them is 5 km away from earth. The normal moons of earth is soon going to be gone away from earth. It goes 3.8 cm away from earth each year. Soon our nearest moon is going to be gone from us in a lot if years.
no. Earth and Mars are the only terrestrials with moons.
Vesta is the only Asteroid visible on Earth by the naked eye. It has no moons
Jupiter has four moons that orbit it. the names of these moons are IO (eye-oh) Callisto, Europa and Ganymede.Time taken for the moons to orbit Jupiter:IO- 1.7 Earth yearsCallisto- 16.7 Earth yearsEuropa- 3.5 Earth yearsGanymede- 7.1 Earth years
Australia has the same number of moons as the rest of the Earth: just one.
There is no direct connection between the mass of a planet and the number of moons it has. Mars is less massive than Earth but has twice as many moons as does Earth. Jupiter is more massive than either Mars of Earth and has many more moons that either of them.
There is no direct connection between the mass of a planet and the number of moons it has. Mars is less massive than Earth but has twice as many moons as does Earth. Jupiter is more massive than either Mars of Earth and has many more moons that either of them.
Earth has one moon.
Uranus has 27 moons and Earth has 1 moon.
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Pluto has four known moons, four times as many as the Earth.
40000 million moons and 3000 trillion satilites
No, the planets have different number of moons, from zero to about 60-70.
4 moons could ft inside the Earth.
Once the moon is 6 times smaller than earth, 6 moons make one earth.
The mass of a planet has nothing to do with its number of moons. For instance, Mars' mass is much less than that of Earth, yet Mars has two moons (Deimos and Phobos) while the Earth has one. (Luna)