One for sure is Titan.
There are eight planets and five dwarf planets in our solar system.
Star (Sun), Planets, Moons, Asteroids, Space dust/junk
Mercury and Venus are the only two major planets in our solar system without moons. They are the two planets closer to the Sun than Earth.Two of the five dwarf planets have no known moons : the asteroid Ceres and the Kuiper Belt object Makemake.Neither Mercury nor Venus have any moons.
Jupiter has four of the five largest moons in the solar system including the largest, Ganymede. The second largest moon, Titan, orbits Saturn.
They do. Six of the eight planets in the solar system have moons and five of them have large moons. If you are asking why no planet has moons exactly like those of Jupiter, each moon has its own unique history, often interacting with its neighboring moons. So no two moons are alike.
Five I can name are: asteroids, planets, black holes, moons, and stars.
The five key astronomical bodies found in the earth's solar system are as follows:a star, nine planets, many more moons, countless asteroids (in the belt between the inner and outer planets, as well as beyond the planets' orbits), and assorted comets.
No, the latest estimates are 5 moons for Pluto and over 60 each for Jupiter and Saturn.
It depends, both moons and dwarf planets vary in size, and size is not the basis of classification. The largest moons in the solar system, including our own moon, are larger than the five recognized dwarf planets, but many moons are smaller.
Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune are examples of planets in our solar system that have two or more moons. Jupiter has the most moons with over 79 known moons, while Saturn has more than 80 moons. Uranus has 27 moons, and Neptune has 14 known moons.
The five heaviest planets in the solar system are Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and Earth.
In our solar system, neither Mercury nor Venus have any moons. For the 300+ extra-solar planets which orbit other stars, we have no way of detecting if the planets have any moons, although it is probable that many do. We're at the edge of our technology just detecting the planet. In theory, an infinite amount of planets have no moons.