no there is not, if so there might be from the outer planets like saturn uranus or neptune definetely
No. The stars are too hot for molecules to form. That said, some of those stars have planets and some of those planets may have water.
There may be ice on some planets that we haven't discovered yet. However, there is ice on Mars and once believed for there to be water.
No i will tell you all the planets some moons have water on them so yeah i will tell you their names are Earth , Neptune Earth's moon , and Uranus
Some do some don't, Earth does but not many have air or water to have life on them.
Some do. Earth is the only planet known to have liquid water. Mars has ice at its poles and beneath its surface in some places.
Yes we can! And we have! Several planets and moons have water on them!
None of the planets in our solar system except Earth are thought to have surface liquid water in any considerable amount. Some planets are known to have water ice or atmospheric water vapor; some moons of Saturn and Jupiter (which are not planets) show evidence of having sub-surface oceans of liquid water owing to tidal heating effects; other planets including Mars and Venus (both of which were thought to have significant amounts of surface water in their history) continue to be studied for the possibility of liquid water below the surface.
they are gas, and gas is less dense
hydrogen, helium, methane and some water
Any planet could. But from the evidence and observations of the planets that we have right now (late 2013), it appears that Earth may be the only one that does. Mars has water, but as ice not as a liquid. Uranus and Neptune probably have water too, in some form, but only deep inside those planets.
As of now, there are no known planets that are exactly the same as Earth in terms of all its characteristics. However, there are planets known as "Earth-like" planets that share some similar characteristics such as being in the habitable zone of their star and having the potential for liquid water on their surface.
Not yet, although we'll probably find some when we go there.