Yes they do.
mercury does not have any due to the fact that it has no moons
I would call it a lunar cycle.
It depends.. If your planet has 2 or more moons then it its possible to have a solar and lunar eclipse at the same time.
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
if you have enough light and water
Moons are formed when a celestial body, such as a planet, captures another smaller object through gravitational attraction. Another way moons can form is through the debris left over after a collision between two celestial bodies.
Different Native American tribes have varying interpretations of time based on the lunar cycle. Generally, two moons could refer to two months, as many tribes base their calendars on the phases of the moon. Each moon represents a lunar cycle of roughly one month.
No, there are not moons or stars ON planet earth, but there are moons and stars around planet earth. == ==
Planet Mars has two moons
A lunar eclipse is where the Moon is in the shadow of the planet earth. The equivalent happens in Jupiter's system constantly, since the planet is so large and the sun appears only as a tiny ball of light. Jupiter's moons will orbit the planet and will be in complete shadow for long periods of time as they go behind Jupiter on every orbit.
There is no planet with exactly 33 moons.
The Earth's moon takes 27 days to orbit the earth (lunar cycle.) The moons of Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune and Uranus all have different times.