If the gravitational pull is strong enough it can keep those moons orbiting around it using inertia.
Mars is the only inner planet in our solar system with more than one moon. It has two small moons called Phobos and Deimos.
The first US spacecraft to enter into an orbit around a planet other than the moon was Mariner 2, which orbited Venus in 1962.
because it wanted to. :)
Earth is the only planet known to have only 1 moon.
all have 1 moon
Mars is the only inner planet in our solar system with more than one moon. It has two small moons called Phobos and Deimos.
Well no outer planet has only one moon they all either have more than 1 or none at all.
jupiter, saturn, uranus
The moon is much smaller, about 1/4 the diameter of Earth.
Maybe it would have been bigger than Pluto, but that is not a planet anymore so I pretty sure No.More InformationOur moon is much smaller than any planet in our solar system. Earth's moon has about 1/50th the volume of Earth. The smallest planet in our solar system, Mercury, has nearly three times the volume and roughly 4 1/2 times the mass of our moon.
The moon has gravity but the earth has more because living people live in the planet.
The pull of gravity is less on the Moon because the Moon has a weaker gravitational field than the Earth. This is because it has a smaller mass.No planet in the Solar System has a mass less than that of the Moon, hence no planet has a weaker gravitational field. So there is no planet you could be on where you would weigh less than if you were on the Moon. (Does that make sense?)However there are moons of other planets which are smaller than the Moon and some which are larger. Jupiter's largest moons Ganymede, Callisto and Io as well as Saturn's largest moon Titan are all bigger than the Moon. Europa (another moon of Jupiter) Neptune's moon Triton and The Dwarf Planet Pluto are all smaller than the Moon.
The planets Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune all have one or more moons.
There's more than 1 PLANET.
larger! wayy larger! (acually, i guess it depends on which moon your talking about... there's way more then 1 ya know.... Earth's moon, Jupiter's moonS, every planet (almost every) has at least 1 moon, and most have more) so that ? isn't answerable since i don't know what moon you need to know about. Be more specific
The first US spacecraft to enter into an orbit around a planet other than the moon was Mariner 2, which orbited Venus in 1962.
NO MYA