There is no such planet in the Solar System.
All the moons in the Solar System:
Mercury and Venus have no moons.
Earth has 1 moon... The Moon...
Mars - 2 moons - Phobos and Deimos
Jupiter - uncertain, but around 64- Io,Europa, Ganymede, Callisto, Amalthea, Himalia, Elara, Pasiphae, Sinope, Lysithea, Carme, Ananke, Leda, Metis, Adrastea, Thebe, Callirrhoe, Themisto, Kalyke, Iocaste, Erinome, Harpalyke, Isonoe, Praxidike, Megaclite, Taygete, Chaldene, Autonoe, Thyone, Hermippe, Eurydome, Sponde, Pasithee, Euanthe, Kale, Orthosie, Euporie, Aitne, plus others yet to receive names.
Saturn - 33 - Titan, Rhea, Iapetus, Dione, Tethys, Enceladus, Mimas, Hyperion, Prometheus, Pandora, Phoebe, Janus, Epimetheus, Helene, Telesto, Calypso, Atlas, Pan, Ymir, Paaliaq, Siarnaq, Tarvos, Kiviuq, Ijiraq, Thrym, Skadi, Mundilfari, Erriapo, Albiorix, Suttung, plus others yet to receive names.
Uranus- 27 -Cordelia, Ophelia, Bianca, Cressida, Desdemona, Juliet, Portia, Rosalind, Belinda, Puck, Miranda, Ariel, Umbriel, Titania, Oberon, Caliban, Sycorax, Prospero, Setebos, Stephano, Trinculo, plus others yet to receive names.
Neptune - 13 moons- Triton, Nereid, Naiad, Thalassa, Despina, Galatea, Larissa, Proteus, plus others yet to receive names.
Dwarf planet Pluto has also at least one "moon", Charon.
The only planets who have more than 5 natural satellites are Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune, but they have way more "moons" than 5, while other planets have less satellites or no satellites at all!
No planet has exactly five moons.
No planet in our Solar System has five moons.
See related question.
Jupiter (with 63 moons), Saturn (with 60 moons), Uranus (with 27 moons) and Uranus (with 13 moons).
Jupiter (with 63 moons), Saturn (with 60 moons), Uranus (with 27 moons) and Neptune (with 13 moons)
none planets rotate the sun there for no has a sun at all
Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune and Uranus all have more than ten moons.
All of the Jovian planets in the solar system have rings and more than eight moons. Neptune has the fewest known moons of the giant planets; : 14.
No, some planets like Mercury and Venus don't have any moons. Earth has one moon, Mars has two moons, and the outer planets have lots of moons. Jupiter has more than 60.
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.
They are larger and so they have more gravity.
None no planets have more moons than jupiter and jupiter has atleast 63 moons more than any other planet
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.
Oh no, it is the outer planets which have the most moons. Terrestrial planets such as Earth have relatively few moons.
The gas giants have more moons than the inner rockey planets, since they are a lot more massive and are in a region of space where more moons can be captured.
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 !
Oh no, it is the outer planets which have the most moons. Terrestrial planets such as Earth have relatively few moons.
Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune and Uranus all have more than ten moons.
Yes. The massive giant planets have far more moons than the less massive terrestrial planets.
Saturn has more moons than Venus. Saturn is second to Jupiter.
All of the Jovian planets in the solar system have rings and more than eight moons. Neptune has the fewest known moons of the giant planets; : 14.
No, some planets like Mercury and Venus don't have any moons. Earth has one moon, Mars has two moons, and the outer planets have lots of moons. Jupiter has more than 60.
They are larger and so they have more gravity.