* Jupiter, 63 moons * Saturn, 61 moons plus over 100 moonlets* Uranus, 27 moons
No planet in our Solar system has 18 moons.See related question.Saturn has 18 moons and seven rings
A few planets have more than 15 moons. Take Jupiter, which has at least 63 of them. Saturn has 60 known moons, while Uranus has 27. I'm reading a 1987 book of date that says: Jupiter has at least 16, Saturn: 23 and Uranus, 15.
Jupiter 63 known moons, Saturn 60 known moons, Uranus 27 known moons, Neptune 13 known moons and Pluto (no longer classed as a planet) 3 known moons.
Mars has two small moons, Phobos and Deimos. Phobos is sort of like "Phoebe," but the planet you are looking for is Saturn. It has over 60 moons, one of which was named that.
Jupiter. it has more than 60 moons.
No, the latest estimates are 5 moons for Pluto and over 60 each for Jupiter and Saturn.
jupiter
* Jupiter, 63 moons * Saturn, 61 moons plus over 100 moonlets* Uranus, 27 moons
Yes, Jupiter and Saturn each of 60 some moons, while Uranus and Neptune have around twenty. The dwarf planet Pluto has three moons.
Yes, Jupiter and Saturn each of 60 some moons, while Uranus and Neptune have around twenty. The dwarf planet Pluto has three moons.
Mercury and Venus have no moons, the other planets all do. Earth has one, Mars two, Jupiter and Saturn each more than 60. The planet Uranus has 27 known moons and Neptune has 13.
Jupiter and Saturn each have 60 or more known moons. In Saturn's case, there are many small moonlets in the ring system. In Jupiter's case, a number of small moons (likely captured asteroids) have comparatively long and elliptical orbits far from the planet.
Saturn is a planet. I think you mean moons. Saturn has about 63 moons. I say about, because it may have more.
In OUR solar system, Earth is the only planet with one moon. Mercury and Venus don't have any moons, Mars has two, and the rest of the planets have more. Jupiter is in the lead, with more than 60 moons, and more still being discovered .
because it is big planet
Because of its emmense gravity