The Earth has one moon.☺☻☺☻
(This answer assumes that a moon is a moon the size of Earth's moon) The volume of Earth is about 49 times bigger than the moon, so Earth has enough space for 49 moons if there were no space between the moons. If both Earth and the moons are assumed to be perfect spheres (which they aren't quite), then about 36 moons would fit inside Earth, since there is no way to put all the moons inside Earth without there being space in between them. Hello my name is shaedra martin and my way of answering your question is simply easy. the moon can fit into earth 4 times.
Jupiter has four moons that orbit it. the names of these moons are IO (eye-oh) Callisto, Europa and Ganymede.Time taken for the moons to orbit Jupiter:IO- 1.7 Earth yearsCallisto- 16.7 Earth yearsEuropa- 3.5 Earth yearsGanymede- 7.1 Earth years
earth is the the only plznet that has one moon
Earth's moon is very large in proportion to its planet. It is just over one quarter of Earth's diameter. While several moons in the solar system are larger than our moon, they orbit much larger planets.
That would include: Sun Mercury Venus Earth Mars and its moons Jupiter and its moons Saturn and its moons Neptune and its moons Uranus and its moons Pluto and other planetesimals and their moons Asteroids Comets
No planet! However, Venus has no moons and is not much smaller than Earth.
The earth only has one moon
The Earth has one moon.☺☻☺☻
There are no moons in Earth. But around Earth, yes. There is one.
No, there are not moons or stars ON planet earth, but there are moons and stars around planet earth. == ==
Earth has one moon, Mars has 2 moons, Jupiter has 63 known moons to date, Saturn has 34 moons, Uranus has 27 moons, Neptune has 7 moons, Pluto has 3 moons.
Uranus has 27 moons and Earth has 1 moon.
The mass of a planet has nothing to do with its number of moons. For instance, Mars' mass is much less than that of Earth, yet Mars has two moons (Deimos and Phobos) while the Earth has one. (Luna)
That is a hard question to answer. Many researchers have tried to determine why the Earth even has a moon. Much is known about how moons form, the effects moons have on their host planets, and much more. As to why we don't have more or less moons, cannot really be answered. You would have had to watch the solar system evolve to answer that.
There are no moons are planets actually on Mars as moons and planets orbit out in space. You see much the same planets from Mars as you do from Earth, except Earth is visible as one of the brightest objects in the sky. Mars itself has two small moons named Phobos and Deimos.
Europa is not a planet; it is one of the moons of Jupiter. Earth is much larger than Europa.
Lots of articles say you can fit 49 or 30 whatever moons in earth but this is not true because the moon is 24.2% the size of earth so about 4 moons. Lots of science shows like the universe on history channel say 4 moons can fit in earth. But the Earth is much denser so about 45 moons would equal the mass of the earth. EDIT: The diameter of the moon is approximately 24.2% the diameter of Earth, but this does not necessarily mean that the volumes are in this ratio. Therefore, you cannot conclude that there are about 4 moons. If no volume was left unused, approximately 49 moons could fit into the Earth (this is not possible in reality as there would have to be empty space to be able to fit the moons into the Earth. So the actual amount of moons that could fit into the Earth is going to be a little less than 49 moons (36 according to some sources).