No. Jupiter's smaller moons are irregular in shape.
Jupiter is the planet and the objects that go round it are the moons of Jupiter. (planets go round the Sun - moons go round planets). The 4 jovian moons you can see with a pair of binoculars are Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto. Ganymede is the largest and the most obvious.
The Moons of UranusCordeliaOpheliaBiancaCressidaDesdemonaJulietPortiaRosalindCupidBelindaPerditaPuckMabMirandaArielUmbrielTitaniaOberonFranciscoCalibanStephanoTrinculoSycoraxMargareProsperoSetebosFerdinand27 in all
No planet has 19 moons as of June 2014. Earth has one moon and Mars has two. Mercury and Venus have no moons. The other planets all have more than 20 moons.
Yes, the planet Mercury does not have any moons. This serves as a counterexample to the statement "all planets have moons."
No, there are not moons or stars ON planet earth, but there are moons and stars around planet earth. == ==
Jupiter is the planet and the objects that go round it are the moons of Jupiter. (planets go round the Sun - moons go round planets). The 4 jovian moons you can see with a pair of binoculars are Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto. Ganymede is the largest and the most obvious.
The Moons of UranusCordeliaOpheliaBiancaCressidaDesdemonaJulietPortiaRosalindCupidBelindaPerditaPuckMabMirandaArielUmbrielTitaniaOberonFranciscoCalibanStephanoTrinculoSycoraxMargareProsperoSetebosFerdinand27 in all
No, Mercury and Venus have no moons.
All the moons look round but some are oval.
Planet X is a hypothetical planet that has yet to be confirmed. Therefore until it is discovered, it will not have any moons.
No planet has 19 moons as of June 2014. Earth has one moon and Mars has two. Mercury and Venus have no moons. The other planets all have more than 20 moons.
Yes, the planet Mercury does not have any moons. This serves as a counterexample to the statement "all planets have moons."
No, there are not moons or stars ON planet earth, but there are moons and stars around planet earth. == ==
Planet Mars has two moons
There is no planet with exactly 33 moons.
Mars is the only planet with two moons. Though all the large planets have at least three or four moons.
Jupiter is the planet with the most moons in our Solar System. As far as the Universe goes, we can barely detect extra-solar planets, so there is no way to actually say what planet in the Universe has the most moons. Since we don't know about all the planets, we *definitely* don't know about all the moons.