Ceres and Eris
It appears that there may be a typographical error in your question, as "potenial" is not a recognized term. Please clarify or provide more context so I can assist you better.
Many of the planets have more than one element. Two of these planets that have more than one element are Earth and Jupiter.
The gas planets have more moons. Of all the gas planets non has fewer than 14 moons. Of the rocky planets, none has more than two. Mercury and Venus have none at all.
There are two planets with an almost perfectly spherical shape. They are Mercury and Venus.
No moons . . . Mercury and Venus One moon . . . Earth Two moons . . . Mars Each of the other planets has more than two moons. Jupiter leads with more than 60 !
why are you asking me
scalar
Mercury and Venus. These two planets have no known moons.
Yes, the densities of the solar system planets can generally be grouped into two categories: terrestrial planets (such as Earth, Venus, Mars, and Mercury) with higher densities due to their rocky compositions, and the gas giant planets (such as Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune) with lower densities due to their gaseous compositions.
Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.
Two Planets was created in 1897.
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.