There are hundreds of moons in the solar system, but only 7 large ones: the Moon, Io, Europa, Ganymede, Callisto, Titan, and Triton.
Planets are not classified as satellites of the Sun. Satellites are objects that orbit planets, while planets orbit the Sun directly. Planets are considered celestial bodies that revolve around a star like the Sun.
The gravitational pull on all the planets are artificial satellites because the satellites orbit all the planets!
All the planets have satellites, except Mercury and Venus.Jupiter
No, the sun does not have any natural satellites. Natural satellites typically orbit planets, and the sun is a star at the center of our solar system, so it does not have any objects orbiting around it in the same way planets do.
Do all planets and satellites lie on the same gravitational layer?
no
Lots. See http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/pete/Moons.htm
All of the planets do except for mercury and Venus.
No, the sun does not have satellites. Satellites are objects that orbit around a celestial body, like Earth, whereas the sun is a star at the center of our solar system. The planets, including Earth, orbit around the sun.
There are millions of them, ranging from the main eight planets, several further dwarf planets, comets, asteroids, kuiper belt objects and meteoroids. All in orbit around our sun.
yes
The orbit of each planet it the path it takes as it rotates round the Sun under the influence of the force of gravity. Every planet has a separate orbit and the orbits all follow Kepler's three laws of planetary motion.