Yes, all of the planets, dwarf planets, asteroids, and comets are natural satellites of the sun.
Only Venus and Mercury, unless you consider dwarf planets.
No, the sun does not have any natural satellites. Natural satellites typically orbit planets, and the sun is a star at the center of our solar system, so it does not have any objects orbiting around it in the same way planets do.
Planets and anything like them. Moons orbiting stars are usually dubbed as dwarf planets.
Yes, Eris, a dwarf planet in our solar system, does not have any natural satellites. It is one of the largest known dwarf planets and is located in the outer regions of the solar system beyond Neptune.
A moon. Moons are natural satellites that revolve around planets or dwarf planets in our solar system.
There are millions of them, ranging from the main eight planets, several further dwarf planets, comets, asteroids, kuiper belt objects and meteoroids. All in orbit around our sun.
In astronomical terms, a satellite is any body that orbits another body. Planets are satellites of stars, and there are smaller "satellite galaxies" that border or orbit larger galaxies such as the Milky Way.The word moons refers to satellites of planets, dwarf planets, or asteroids. They are often called "natural satellites" to differentiate them from "artificial satellites" which are manmade devices in orbit around planets or moons.
Artificial satellites are man-made objects placed into orbit around Earth for various purposes, such as communication, navigation, weather monitoring, and scientific research. Natural satellites, on the other hand, are celestial bodies that orbit planets or dwarf planets, such as Earth's moon, which occur naturally in the universe.
All the Planets, dwarf planets, comets and asteroids in the Solar System are natural satellites of the Sun. A natural satellite is something which orbits a parent body and is not made by man. Hence Earth is a natural satellite of the Sun, and the Moon is a natural satellite of the Earth. The Moon is not a satellite of the Sun because it orbits the Earth. The ISS and what people call satellites are technically 'artificial satellites' because they are made by people.
They are satellites of our sun, as with the eight major planets. They orbit the sun directly.
There are 168 known natural satellites (moons) of the 8 major planets. There are also moons around 3 of the 5 dwarf planets (Pluto, Eris, and Haumea). There are more than 200 artificial satellites (or expired satellites) in Earth orbit or scattered throughout the solar system.