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asteriods
Its most likely that they do. Any planet with an axial tilt will have seasons throughout its orbit. Eclipses of orbiting moons are also likely to occur on these exoplanets, though it would be rare to find an orbiting moon that is almost the same apparent size as the star - as with Earth.
No. Beyond Pluto, there are thousands of other objects orbiting the Sun.
a couple ton i think something like that
There are no moons in Jupiter. Jupiter does have 63 confirmed that are in a stable orbit around the planet though. There could well be more than this though, which have yet to be discovered.Jupiter have 64 moons.
Exoplanets refers to planets to that have been found orbiting stars other than the sun.
exoplanets can be located orbiting any star. there are not any imparticuler stars that have more or less chance of a star system. today we have found well over 200 exoplanets.
asteriods
The Moon, and some thousands of artificial satellites.The Moon, and some thousands of artificial satellites.The Moon, and some thousands of artificial satellites.The Moon, and some thousands of artificial satellites.
Its most likely that they do. Any planet with an axial tilt will have seasons throughout its orbit. Eclipses of orbiting moons are also likely to occur on these exoplanets, though it would be rare to find an orbiting moon that is almost the same apparent size as the star - as with Earth.
Over 900 planets have been discovered orbiting other stars. These are called exoplanets.
In our solar system Mars is the only planet with two moons. We are not yet aware of moons orbiting exoplanets (planets circling distant stars).
No. Beyond Pluto, there are thousands of other objects orbiting the Sun.
Exoplanets is the name for the category. Each individually gets a code-name based on either its star or the instrument that found it, and letters (a, b, c) indicating order of discovery. None have official names yet.
Scientists have identified a large number of "exoplanets"; planets that orbit other stars. Most such discoveries have occurred by either occultation or perturbation; either the planet blocks out a tiny bit of the light of the star, or the star "wiggles" a little under the pull of the planet's gravity. Beyond a vague guess at the mass and size of the exoplanets, nothing is known about them.
a couple ton i think something like that
Thousands of orbiting satellite, 10-25 rovers, 4 deep space probes