We can only know for certainty that we can live here on earth. As far as the other planets and moons, we cannot with our current technology. Perhaps sometime in the future we can either alter their climates (called planetary engineering) or design habitation modules that simulate the conditions on earth so that we can.
Yes. Many Planets and dwarf planets have less than 10 moons. Planets: Mercury- 0 moons Venus- 0 moons Earth- 1 moon Mars- 2 moon Neptune- 8 moons Dwarf planets: Pluto- 3 moons and many other dwarf planets that i don't know how many moons they have.
Six out of the eight planets in our solar system have moons. (Mercury and Venus are the only two that do not.)
Mercury and Venus don't have moons, the other 6 planets do, so that's 6/8 of the planets. If you feel like reducing it, that's equal to 3/4.
The sun has 8 or 9 major planets and thousands of smaller objects orbiting around it. Some of the planets have many moons. (eg Neptune has 13) It can have moons but so far all of the moons are to close to the planets to get caught in the sun's orbit.
There are no planets in our solar system with exactly 8 moons. Mercury-0 Venus-0 Earth-1 Mars-2 Jupiter-63 Saturn- at least 61 Uranus-27 Neptune-13 Pluto has been downgraded in class from a major planet to a minor planet. It has 3 moons.
within all 8 planets not all of them have any moons so does saturn have any moons ,yes
Yes. Many Planets and dwarf planets have less than 10 moons. Planets: Mercury- 0 moons Venus- 0 moons Earth- 1 moon Mars- 2 moon Neptune- 8 moons Dwarf planets: Pluto- 3 moons and many other dwarf planets that i don't know how many moons they have.
178 including pluto's moons. 8 planets and 170 moons.
6/8 = 3/4 = 75 percent
Six out of the eight planets in our solar system have moons. (Mercury and Venus are the only two that do not.)
Mercury and Venus don't have moons, the other 6 planets do, so that's 6/8 of the planets. If you feel like reducing it, that's equal to 3/4.
here ya go http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/astronomy/planets/neptune/neptunemoons.shtml
That's correct! Each planet in our solar system has a different number of moons that orbit around it. Some planets, like Jupiter and Saturn, have a large number of moons, while others, like Mercury and Venus, have none.
neptuno
Jupiter: 67 known moons Saturn: 62 Uranus: 27 Neptune: 14
There are 8 planets in the solar system, 6 have at least one moon. Mercury and Venus have no known moons.
The sun has 8 or 9 major planets and thousands of smaller objects orbiting around it. Some of the planets have many moons. (eg Neptune has 13) It can have moons but so far all of the moons are to close to the planets to get caught in the sun's orbit.