It also contains asteroids and comets, which technically are not satellites as they do not orbit a planet, but orbit the sun in the asteroid belt, the Kuyper belt, and the Oort cloud.
All the planets have satellites, except Mercury and Venus.Jupiter
the solar system contains satellites that provide "solar power"
Mercury and Venus do not have any natural satellites.
Of the eight planets in our solar system, only Mercury and Venus have no known satellites. Furthermore, Pluto has at least four of them.
As of the end of 2010, planetary astronomers have documented about 245 known satellites of the planets in the solar system.
None. By definition , our "solar system" is everything controlled by the gravity of our sun. The planets, their satellites, asteroids, dwarf planets, comets, interplanetary dust, and man-made satellites are "within" our solar system. Any "planet" outside out solar system is just that - OUTSIDE of it.
because Satellites can send pictures of the planets for us to explore ( Mentally not Physically )
No, satellites are not part of the solar system. Satellites are man-made objects that orbit planets or other celestial bodies within the solar system, such as Earth's Moon. The solar system consists of the Sun, the planets, their moons, and other smaller celestial objects like asteroids and comets.
Moons are considered satellites, hence several planets in our solar system have satellites: Neptune, Earth, Mars, Saturn, Uranus & Jupiter.
Almost everything in the solar system at this time. Planets, Moons.
The only planets in our solar system that do not have natural satellites are Mercury and Venus.
Mercury and Venus. They are the only planets without a moon.