There is no single planet named Kepler; rather Kepler is a prefix added to the designations of planets discovered by the Kepler telescope. Several planets discovered by Kepler, including Kepler-438b, Kepler-442b, Kepler 440b, and Kepler 296f, orbit in the habitable zones of their stars, which means they might have liquid water on their surfaces. Currently we do not have the technology to determine if they actually have liquid water.
As yet we are not certain as to the origins of Earth's water.
Yes we can! And we have! Several planets and moons have water on them!
none that we officially know of but a ton of em actually
Its because its far away from the sun and also doesn't have very much water.
No
No. The Jovian planets are much more massive than the terrestrial planets.
NO- People have found water on other planets but there is no life there.
Other planets do not have water nor life
No. The outer planets are gas planets, which are much less dense than the inner terrestrial planets.
Much less than that of Earth. For example, Saturn's density is less than that of water; Jupiter's density is slightly larger than that of water.
to grow.
The inner planets are rocky, with distinct solid surfaces, and dense, whereas the outer planets are gaseous, have no solid surface and are relatively light in comparison. The density of Saturn, for example, is less than that of water.