They are not directly related, but in general, larger planets have more moons. we can only talk about the planets in THIS solar system; while we know of a couple of thousand other planets in other solar systems, we know nothing at all about their moons. We expect to find moons, once our telescopes get better (or our spacecraft get closer) but at this point, it is mostly guesswork.
From smallest to largest (by mass), the number of known moons is 0, 2, 0, 1, 27, 14, at least 150, 67. If you want to measure diameter instead of mass, swap the 27 and the 14.
You should also be aware that it appears to be an oddity of our solar system that the outer planets are large and the inner planets are small, so what appears to be a slight positive correlation between size and number of moons may actually have more to do with distance from the Sun (in that ranking, the number of known moons is 0, 0, 1, 2, 67, 150+, 27, 14). In the universe as a whole there are plenty of "hot Jupiters", massive planets in very close orbit around their primary star. We have no idea how many (if any) moons any extrasolar planet has.
The Earth has a diameter of 12742km on average. It is a slightly squashed sphere though, due to its spin pushing out at the equator. Its polar diameter is 12714km, while its diameter at the equator is 12756km. The diameter of the moon is 3474km.
The diameter of Venus, the second planet from the sun, is approximately 12,103.6 kilometers. This is very close to Earth's diameter (12,756.6 km). Here are comparative diameters of the eight major planets: Mercury 4,880 km Venus 12,104 km Earth 12,756 km Mars 6,794 km Jupiter 142,984 km Saturn 120,536 km Uranus 51,118 km Neptune 49,532 km
observing pictures of the terrain; inferring what the images are; measuring the distance between features (such as rocks); interpreting meteorological information to try to understand the climate on Saturn
The planet is Pluto, but Pluto is not a planet anymore so no planet has rock and ice in the middle.
Depending on size, and some other factors, that can be a planet, a dwarf planet, an asteroid, or a meteor. Depending how you look at it, you might or might not include moons (they orbit a planet, and together, planet and moons orbit the star).
No, there is not.
No, there is not.
The smallest planet is Mercury with a diameter of about 4,880 kilometers, while the largest is Jupiter with a diameter of about 139,820 kilometers. Therefore, the diameter difference between the smallest and largest planet is approximately 135,940 kilometers.
The relationship between the planet's SPEED and its distance from the Sun is given by Kepler's Third Law.From there, it is fairly easy to derive a relationship between the period of revolution, and the distance.
The thinner the atmosphere, the more craters the planet has. Planets with thicker atmospheres burn up most asteroids before they hit the ground.
It is like sphere, but "flattened" at the poles. So the diameter at the equator is about 10% more than the diameter between the poles.
Saturn's moon Titan is larger and Jupiter's moon Callisto is smaller.
The planet Uranus.
The planet you are referring to is Jupiter, which has a diameter of approximately 86,881 miles. Mercury has a diameter of about 3,032 miles, Venus has a diameter of about 7,521 miles, Earth has a diameter of about 7,917 miles, and Mars has a diameter of about 4,212 miles.
the Jupiter diameter is 142,984km
Jupiter is the largest with the largest diameter.
That's very small for a planet!Planets have diameters measured in thousands of kilometers. I think you may have used the wrong number.