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No. The only planets without a moon are Mercury and Venus all the other planets have anywhere from one moon to more than sixty.
Stars and Moon are always there; only that sometimes, in the daytime, they are outshone by the Sun. However, the Moon, and some of the brighter planets (especially Venus), are visible even at noon (if you know exactly where to look).
No, several are visible to the naked eye. Most noticeable is Venus, often the brightest object in the night sky after the moon. Mercury is sometimes visible as are Mars, Jupiter and Saturn (barely)
The Moon is the only natural satellite of earth.
crescent
Yes, it does and it reflects light onto other planets making stars.
The moon is visible during the day but it is most visible at night and early morning, but it is somtimes visible throughout the day.
To a close approximation, none of them are visible to the unaided eye. With our bare eyes, we can see only a few thousand of the brightest ones. That's something like 0.0000025 percent of the stars in our own galaxy, and no individual stars in any other galaxy.
Only the Earth has one moon.
no. the moon only revloves earth
Earth
Earth has one moon and earth is the only planet next its moon however, other planets have their own moons. http://www.windows.ucar.edu/tour/link=/our_solar_system/moons_table.html The link above takes you to a "table" of moons, it lists which planets have moons, how many moons each planet has, the names of the moons, when they were discovered, who discovered them etc... Just copy and paste the address into your browser if you can't click it.