Yavin has 26 moons out of which 3 are habitable: Yavin 4, Yavin 8, and Yavin 13.
Star Wars
If you mean the planet's names, there are way too many to name. But the ones that appear in the films are Coruscant, Naboo, Tatooine, Geonosis, Kamino, Utapau, Mustafar, Alderaan, Yavin, Hoth, Bespin, Dagobah, and the forest moon of Endor.
Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope (a.k.a. the original released as just "Star Wars" in 1977).
You need to go to the Yavin space station after you've got all the star map pieces.
Spice mines of Kessel There are many prisons in the star wars but you left out the Star End Prison.
In the original Star Wars movie, the Death Star destroyed the planet Alderaan and later targeted the Rebel base on Yavin IV, the fourth moon of the plabnet Yavin. In Return of the Jedi, the second Death Star was in orbit around the forest moon Endor.
In our own solar system, the only planets with many moons are outer planets. It seems likely that if there were a large planet close to a companion star, the star's gravity would strip away any orbiting moons. However, we have no way of detecting the moons of any extrasoloar planets.
Alderaan was the first planet the death star destroyed.
Jupiter has 63 moons and it is the biggest planet not including the sun
A planet and its moons are collectively referred to as a planetary system. The planet is the primary celestial body that orbits a star, while moons are natural satellites that orbit the planet.
Moons don't orbit stars; they orbit planets. If it's a moon, then it orbits a planet. If it orbits a star, then it isn't a moon, it's a planet.
Mars, being a planet has no stars - it orbits the Sun (Sol) and has two moons.
A planet orbits a star. A moon orbits a planet or dwarf planet.
TrES-4 is actually a star. It appears to have at least one planet. I don't think we have the technology yet to detect any moons around the planet.
Star Wars
There are no moons around a neutron star. A large, spherical body orbiting a neutron star would be considered a planet.
Sirius is a star (actually, a binary star), so none, as stars do not have moons. Either or both of the stars that comprise Sirius could theoretically have planets which have moons, but if so, we don't know about them yet.