There are no stars ON any planet. The smallest star is MUCH larger than the largest planet.
Mercury is a planet. It orbits around the sun and in that sense it "has" one star." But in the more common use of that word, Mercury doesn't "have" stars.
300,million stars surround Mercury! That's a strange question. Obviously there are no stars anywhere near Mercury except for the Sun. However, I suppose you could say the entire Universe surrounds Mercury, in a way.
NONE!!!! The nearest star is the SUN. All the other stars are outside the Solar System.
Shooting stars are all in our atmosphere, they are meteors.
Earth and Venus. From Earth Venus and Mercury are planets visible as "morning" and "evening" stars. From Venus, Mercury would appear in the morning and evening sky. From Mars I would expect Earth, Venus, and Mercury to all be morning and evening "stars."
no
yes. mercury has no atmosphere so as long as you block the direct sun you can see all the stars from anywhere on the surface just like space.
Runaway Stars - 2008 Mercury in Retrograde 1-13 was released on: USA: 13 November 2008
Mercury... ^_^
Uranus.
Jupiter and Mercury are in the same solar system that we are. That solar system has 1 star: the sun.
The Mercury Year (time to revolve around the Sun) is 3/2 the Mercury day (time to revolve once on its own axis relative to the distant stars) Mercury orbital period about 87,97 Earth days Sidereal day (relative to the stars) 58,7 earth days.