Yes. Jupiter, with its relatively huge moons, has solar eclipses on a daily basis. These can be seen from Earth; the moons' shadows are seen moving over Jupiter's surface. Well, Jupiter's visible part at any rate - it doesn't have a surface like Earth.
Yes. Jupiter, with its relatively huge moons, has solar eclipses on a daily basis. These can be seen from Earth; the moons' shadows are seen moving over Jupiter's surface. Well, Jupiter's visible part at any rate - it doesn't have a surface like Earth.
Yes. Jupiter, with its relatively huge moons, has solar eclipses on a daily basis. These can be seen from Earth; the moons' shadows are seen moving over Jupiter's surface. Well, Jupiter's visible part at any rate - it doesn't have a surface like Earth.
Yes. Jupiter, with its relatively huge moons, has solar eclipses on a daily basis. These can be seen from Earth; the moons' shadows are seen moving over Jupiter's surface. Well, Jupiter's visible part at any rate - it doesn't have a surface like Earth.
Mercury and Venus do not experience eclipses because they lack moons large enough to create shadows on their surfaces during their orbits.
Babylonians predicted eclipses based on their observations of celestial events and their mathematical calculations. They used records of previous eclipses to identify patterns and develop predictive models. Babylonian astronomers tracked the movements of the sun, moon, and planets to anticipate when eclipses would occur.
Planets that have moons and are positioned in such a way that their moons can pass between them and the sun can experience eclipses. This includes planets like Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.
Any planet with moons could potentially experience an eclipse. Transits are what happens when other planets (Mercury & Venus) pass between earth and sun. Neither of these have moons. Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto all have moons. Pluto's moon (Charon) is big and close to it--it may (depending on its orbit) occult the sun frequently. Jupiter usually has some lunar shadow dotting its sunside surface. Only earth and Pluto have moons big enough to produce total eclipses. (Not sure about dwarf planets beyond Pluto--some of which also have moons). Mars has two tiny moons.
no thunder does not appear in other planets
Yes.
Jupiter
Mercury and Venus can never have any eclipses, because they have no moons.
mercury& venus
Its most likely that they do. Any planet with an axial tilt will have seasons throughout its orbit. Eclipses of orbiting moons are also likely to occur on these exoplanets, though it would be rare to find an orbiting moon that is almost the same apparent size as the star - as with Earth.
when all the planets are in a strait line i think
Mercury AND Venus :]
i think we only have it and and all the rest have a phase
Planets with moons may indeed have Earth-like eclipses. Eclipses happen when moon orbital plane intersects with planet orbital plane with respect to its star. Eclipses can only happen however if angular diameter of the moon is similar to (or greater than) angular diameter of star as seen from planet's surface, which is quite a rare condition. In the whole Solar System moon-eclipses only happen on Earth.
Mercury and Venus do not experience eclipses because they lack moons large enough to create shadows on their surfaces during their orbits.
Babylonians predicted eclipses based on their observations of celestial events and their mathematical calculations. They used records of previous eclipses to identify patterns and develop predictive models. Babylonian astronomers tracked the movements of the sun, moon, and planets to anticipate when eclipses would occur.
Mercury and Venus do not, mainly because they have no moons.