That would depend on the speed they are travelling. If they were both going at the same speed then the one nearer would complete its orbit first, as it has a shorter distance to travel.
There are a total of 53 moons that orbit the planet Saturn. Saturn's moons were first discovered by Christian Huygens in 1655.
The Galilean moons orbit the planet Jupiter.
Much smaller than the planet they orbit.
Europa is one of the main moons of the planet Jupiter.
Most moons orbit their planet the same way the planet rotates. One of Neptune's moons is very different. That moon goes in the opposite direction of Neptune's rotation.
The planet will orbit the sun, while moons orbit the planet.
27 moons orbit Uranus that we know of
The moon orbits our planet. Planets do not orbit moon. A moon is a moon because it orbits planets. The reverse of your question, 'What was the first moon to orbit a planet.', is hard to say. Moons are formed in different ways and because of this can be made of materials that existed long before they became moons.
The orbit of moons reveals the mass of the planet.
There are a total of 53 moons that orbit the planet Saturn. Saturn's moons were first discovered by Christian Huygens in 1655.
many moons
The Galilean moons orbit the planet Jupiter.
the planet that has the most amount of moons is Jupiter which has 67 moons
Moons don't orbit stars; they orbit planets. If it's a moon, then it orbits a planet. If it orbits a star, then it isn't a moon, it's a planet.
A planet orbits a star. A moon orbits a planet or dwarf planet.
Yes. Two moons orbit the planet Mars: Phobos and Deimos.
Neptune, the furthest planet from our sun.