jupiter has about 63 moons
4
The planet Earth has precisely one natural satellite, the moon, also known as luna. It also has numerous artificial satellites that human beings have placed into orbit. None of them qualify as moons. only one
Within our solar system, it seems a fairly steady rule that the larger a planet is, the more satellites it winds up with, mostly because the larger planets have more gravity, and can attract - ad gravitationally bind - more objects into orbit around them.
The central body that shapes Jupiter's orbit is the sun. Jupiter doesn't orbit
earth's moon, and is hardly aware that it exists.
Jupiter orbits the sun every 11.86 [earth] years, at an average distance
from the sun of 483.8 million miles.
Many planets have moons, many do not. To list all is considerably time consuming, so you are advised to see the related links for links to and details of planets which (are suspected to) have moons or natural satellites.
6 planets have moons. Mecury and Venus does not have any moons. Pluto is officially not a planet.
we donot know how many plantes are there in the galaxy,and how many galaxies are there in the universe. if you are asking about solar system i.e., where our earth is. we have 10 planets.
This question is awkwardly worded. The moon orbits the earth every 27.3 days. The lunar month is about 29 days long. The moon itself contains no orbits. An orbit is a revolution about another body.
The moon orbits the earth, the earth/moon system orbits the sun (every 365.24 days). The sun orbits the Milky Way Galaxy ever 220 million years or so. The galaxy sort of orbits about the local group--a cosmic dance of galaxies, as our local group speeds towards a massive collection of galaxies known as "The Great Attractor." There doesn't really seem to be higher scales of orbits beyond that. All the galaxies are moving apart with the expansion of intergalactic space.
The planets with multiple moons are Mars (2), Jupiter (67), Saturn (62), Uranus (27), and Neptune (14). Worth mentioning is Pluto, which is no longer a planet, with five moons. Three of those moons were discovered before it lost planetary status.
Mars (2), Jupiter (67), Saturn (62), Uranus (27), Neptune (14).
The only solar system that we know for certain contains ANY moons is ours.
No, there are not moons or stars ON planet earth, but there are moons and stars around planet earth. == ==
Planet Mars has two moons
There is no planet with exactly 33 moons.
Jupiter has those, plus at least 48 more satellites.
Mercury has 0 moons and so does Venus. They're the only planets to not have moons.
That planet would be: Saturn. Please send me a trust point!
There are planets that have more than 5 moons, but none that we know of that have 5 exactly.
None known.
The dwarf planet Pluto has 3 moons - Charon, Hydra and Nix.
No, there are not moons or stars ON planet earth, but there are moons and stars around planet earth. == ==
Planet Mars has two moons
There is no planet with exactly 33 moons.
Jupiter is the planet with the most moons. It has 63 confirmed moons.
Neptune has 13 moons and 5 rings. Neptune's rings are much darker than Saturn's rings.
no planet has 16 moons
Jupiter has those, plus at least 48 more satellites.
The planet with the most moons is JUPITER as it has 62 moons and then SATURN with 33 moons.