This depends on the planet. Some have none, like Venus; some have one, like Earth. Mars has two, Jupiter is a few dozen little ones plus four big ones, Saturn has a bunch. There isn't any single correct answer.
1 moon cycle is 28 days...365.25 days per year times 17 years divide by moon cycle equals 221.75 moons in a 17 year period....cls
Phobos, one of the moons of Mars, orbits the planet at a speed of about 2.14 km/s (4,800 mph). It is one of the fastest-moving moons in the Solar System due to its close proximity to Mars.
Jupiter does not have any suns. It is a planet that orbits the Sun in our solar system.
Tornadoes have been happening from the beginning from our planet's birth. Since then we have not been able to record the amount because there were no intelligent human life, no recorded written language, and there were tornadoes in areas with no inhabitants. We do not have the exact number of tornadoes that have occurred on this planet. Yet we do have the number of tornadoes average per year in different countries.
I calculate the answers to be about: For Io: 0.71 Newtons per kilogram. For Europa: 0.28 Newtons per kilogram. It's hard to give an exact answer because of the varying distances of the moons from Jupiter.
There are 167 known moons around the eight planets of our Solar System. Therefore the average number of moons per planet is 167/8 which gives 20.875 moons. The question is obviously about our Solar System, not exomoons, nor the whole universe. Please add your comments to the discussion board: That is what it is for.
1 moon cycle is 28 days...365.25 days per year times 17 years divide by moon cycle equals 221.75 moons in a 17 year period....cls
The exact number of rotations of a planet is equal to one rotation per revolution. This is because the time it takes for a planet to complete one orbit around its star is typically the same as the time it takes for the planet to rotate once on its axis.
Not on another planet per se. Venus and Mars have volcanoes, but none have been observed to erupt. Volcanic eruptions have been observed on Io, one of the moons of Jupiter.
There are millions of pounds of food eaten per year. The exact number depends on the exact location being studied.
Phobos, one of the moons of Mars, orbits the planet at a speed of about 2.14 km/s (4,800 mph). It is one of the fastest-moving moons in the Solar System due to its close proximity to Mars.
its 638..:) the exact number of tribal origins in India.. its as per the recognition of tribal affairs ministry.
Earth's moon orbits the Earth however other planets have moons as well, often several per planet. All planets in our solar system orbit the sun, our closest star.
Jupiter does not have any suns. It is a planet that orbits the Sun in our solar system.
Yes it does. Because it means mole per liter and both of these units are clearly defined.
Tornadoes have been happening from the beginning from our planet's birth. Since then we have not been able to record the amount because there were no intelligent human life, no recorded written language, and there were tornadoes in areas with no inhabitants. We do not have the exact number of tornadoes that have occurred on this planet. Yet we do have the number of tornadoes average per year in different countries.
I calculate the answers to be about: For Io: 0.71 Newtons per kilogram. For Europa: 0.28 Newtons per kilogram. It's hard to give an exact answer because of the varying distances of the moons from Jupiter.