if it was your mom it could lol
A gas giant would have the most moons, seeing as Jupiter has 63 moons, and Saturn has 61 moons, both of which are gas giants.
Although many asteroids accreted through gravity and tidal interactions, their "moons" would simply be smaller asteroids or meteoroids that were caught in the gravitational pull. Unless they approach directly and collide, they can form orbits around the larger body until perturbed by some other body.
it uses gravity. The sun has a gravitational pull, so it keeps the closest planet close to it. the farther away a planet is, the weaker the gravitational pull. Without it the planets would "drift" off from the sun. Plus all the moons wouldn't orbit us anymore. -----CMH
No. Mercury does not have any moons. The nearness of Mercury to the Sun (which exerts much more gravitational influence than the planet) is the likely reason that no natural satellites are present. It is unlikely but possible that one or more may have existed in the past.
no.Venus has no moons whats so ever.If venus had moons, then the planet would be much cooler because the moon would be blocking venus from the sun, but venus is above 5000 degrees so it has no moons.Hope this helps.
Callisto is a moon, and moons do not have moons of their own. The gravitational influence of the planet would overwhelm any tendency of a moon to acquire its own moons.
No the Earth would pull u more than the moon
Life would probably be unchanged. if you mean a second moon as large as the one we currently have, it would be very much like it is now, only there is a slight possibility of gravitational disruption causing the moons to collide, or one of the moons to collide with us.
the gravitational attraction would increase, because the more mass something has the more gravitational pull it has.
if you weigh 100lbs on earth your weight would be 16.6lbs on the moon. it still has a gravitational pull so yes.
If the Earth stopped exerting the force of gravity on the moon, it would slingshot away from the earth, but because of the gravitational pull of the sun, it would eventually settle into a stable orbit around the sun.
A slingshot carried in a public place would be classed as an offensive weapon - so not legal.
that is tecnicly impossible you would have to be in the exosphere without the moons gravitational pull and fly at a 25degree angle to fly as far as a plane
Because when they are close to the sun first of all they are are smaller so if they had a moon the moon would have to be kinda small. And also the planets close to the sun are made to be able to get to high temperatures. Earth can't get satellites to Mercury and a moon is related to the satellites and the moon would burn up in the heat. All mass has gravity. The inner planets cannot "hang on" to their moons due to their lack of mass, therefore they are unable to overcome the suns gravitational affect on the moons which would pull them into the sun. The outer planets can "hang on" to their moons and attract more because of their mass (therefore gravity). The distance from the sun has less of an impact on these moons, therefore, the sun cannot pull any of the moons away from the outer planets. Also, the outer planets are "kind of" moon magnets due to their gravitational pull.
Pajama SamMonster Bash!
Some moons can be bigger than some planets, but moons cannot be bigger than their own planet otherwise the planet would become the moon and the moon would become the planet due to the difference in size, mass and gravitational pull.
4 moons would go across the earth, and 109 earths would go across the sun.