There may be some planets that don't reflect light but if they are there we can't see them and unless they were big enough to affect the orbits of nearby planets we would not be aware of them.
no, they just reflect light
Both mercury the metal and Mercury the planet reflect light quite well.
It does reflect light, just like all the other planets.
it depends if its near a sun. remember, MOONS AND PLANETS ARE NOT LIGHT SOURCES. they simply reflect the suns light. therefore, if they are not near enough to a sun, the moons would be dark, as would the planet, cos there is hardly any light to reflect. (oh and there is no known planet with 62 moons.)
No. Planets do not generate their own light; they reflect the light of the Sun.
Planets are not hot enough to emit their own light. They only reflect light.
Planets do not generate their own light. They appear to glow because they reflect sunlight off their surfaces. The amount of light reflected depends on the planet’s composition, size, and distance from the sun. This reflected light is what we see from Earth as the planet's glow.
Planets do not emit their own light; instead, they reflect light from the Sun. This reflected sunlight allows us to see planets shining in the night sky. The amount of light reflected depends on the planet's surface composition and atmosphere.
Only the star. Asteroids, planets and moons just reflect light from the Sun.
Stars are themselves celestial bodies that emit light by atomic fusion and fission and is not a dead planet to reflect our sun's light.
Neptune is a planet, not a star. It is the eighth planet in our solar system and is classified as an ice giant. Stars are astronomical objects that generate light and heat through nuclear fusion in their cores, while planets like Neptune do not have their own light source and instead reflect light from the sun.
No. Planets do not produce light, only stars (such as the sun) can. The light from the stars (sun) reflect off the surface of the planet or the gasses in its atmosphere.