That planet would be: Saturn. Please send me a trust point!
None of the planets have 7 moons.Mercury - 0Venus - 0Earth - 1Mars - 2Jupiter - 62Saturn - 33Uranis - 27Neptune - 13Pluto - 1http://www.spacetoday.org/SolSys/Moons/MoonsSolSys.html
Triton is one of Neptunes moons. It's the seventh largest moon in the solar system and neptunes largest moon, discovered in 1846. It's the only large moon which orbits it's planet in the opposite direction to the planets spin direction.
Both Jupiter and Saturn have more than 60 moons. Saturn may have more than 200, at least 61 have secure orbits. Saturn has 34 that have been named, and 49 altogether. It could have more, depending on how small a body qualifies as a moon. Saturn has broad rings of debris, so large they are visible from earth via small telescope. Jupiter also has rings, but its rings are faint and wispy. Jupiter has the largest moon, Ganymede, and two others nearly as large. Saturn has only one moon nearly the size of Ganymede--Titan. Titan is the only moon with an appreciable atmosphere, and Titan's atmosphere has 10 times the surface pressure of earth's.
For the Earth's Moon (Luna), you could fit 2.8 Moons into the volume of Mercury. Mercury is the smallest of the major planets, and is smaller than the moons Ganymede (Jupiter) and Titan (Saturn). But it is much more dense than either, as many of its lighter elements were dispersed at that close distance to the Sun.
Saturn has the most expansive ring system in the Solar System. The rings are made up of many individual boulders of water ice independently orbiting the planet. The rings are about 70,000km wide (nearly twice the circumference of the Earth) and usually no more than 10 metres thick.
Jupiter has those, plus at least 48 more satellites.
The planet Saturn has 53 named moons (not only 23 moons), and another nine which are still being studied.Many of the moons are very small: 33 are less than 10 km in diameter and 13 moons are less than 50 km.Many of the moons are named after Titans, giants, or minor Greek or Roman gods.Some of Saturn's moons are very large; the moon Titan is bigger than the planet Mercury.
No planet has 10 moons in our Solar System.See related question
None of the planets have 7 moons.Mercury - 0Venus - 0Earth - 1Mars - 2Jupiter - 62Saturn - 33Uranis - 27Neptune - 13Pluto - 1http://www.spacetoday.org/SolSys/Moons/MoonsSolSys.html
which planet has 10 rings and 15 moons?Saturn.
there is no answer for this Question (i wouldn't want to be you right now) But Uranus has more than 10 rings and 15 moons!
The planet, "Uranus" has 27 moons . . . there may be a few that have not been discovered. The odd thing about the names of Uranus's moons is that they are all named for characters in Shakepeare's plays. All the other planets' moons are named for Greek gods or their friends and enemies.
There were 2 millions of sky planet dogs in 300 . BC but there was lots of moons with dogs but in 1 . AD the moons were falling down for 2`000 years but there was a moon as size as 10 suns and it burn`t the moons
None of them. The only planets with rings are the four outer gas planets, none of them have 15 moons exactly.
Big Ideas for a Small Planet ended on 2007-07-10.
This planet likely experiences strong gravitational forces due to its multiple rings and moons. The complex interactions among the rings and moons could lead to unique astronomical phenomena, such as eclipses and ring shadows moving across the planet's surface. The planet's environment may also be dynamic and diverse, providing rich opportunities for scientific study.
Triton is one of Neptunes moons. It's the seventh largest moon in the solar system and neptunes largest moon, discovered in 1846. It's the only large moon which orbits it's planet in the opposite direction to the planets spin direction.