yes, they have discovered plenty
Mercury has no satellites.
Venus is one of the few planets that doesn't have any satellites orbiting around it. Venus also is a planet with no moons.
Venus does not have any natural satellites.
You probably mean to ask about natural satellites as opposed to artificial satellites. In terms of neutrality, all satellites are neutral. In any event, the planet Jupiter has the most natural satellites, of any planet in our solar system. The planet Earth has the most artificial satellites.
Mercury and Venus have no natural satellites.
William H Smyth has written: 'Extended atmospheres of outer planet satellites and comets' -- subject(s): Satellites, Comets
No, the sun does not have any natural satellites. Natural satellites typically orbit planets, and the sun is a star at the center of our solar system, so it does not have any objects orbiting around it in the same way planets do.
None of them. Try comets and some of the smaller satellites.
Asteroids and Comets.
The solar system.
-- meteoroids -- asteroids -- comets -- satellites -- planets (rocky ones)
The satellites that orbit the sun are the planets. In order they are Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. There are also additional satellites, such as the asteroid belt, various comets and proto-planets.
Yes, all of the planets, dwarf planets, asteroids, and comets are natural satellites of the sun.
None. By definition , our "solar system" is everything controlled by the gravity of our sun. The planets, their satellites, asteroids, dwarf planets, comets, interplanetary dust, and man-made satellites are "within" our solar system. Any "planet" outside out solar system is just that - OUTSIDE of it.
Nero did not believe anything about comets. The ancient Roman historian Tacitus reported that a comet occurred during the reign of Nero.
It also contains asteroids and comets, which technically are not satellites as they do not orbit a planet, but orbit the sun in the asteroid belt, the Kuyper belt, and the Oort cloud.
There are millions of them, ranging from the main eight planets, several further dwarf planets, comets, asteroids, kuiper belt objects and meteoroids. All in orbit around our sun.