At this moment Jupiter has 63 moons and moonlets
Saturn has 60
Jupiter and Saturn each have 60 or more known moons. In Saturn's case, there are many small moonlets in the ring system. In Jupiter's case, a number of small moons (likely captured asteroids) have comparatively long and elliptical orbits far from the planet.
Planet Mars has two moons
Galileo Galilei did not discover any moons orbiting Saturn; his observations were primarily focused on Jupiter. He is credited with discovering four large moons of Jupiter, known as the Galilean moons, in 1610. Saturn's moons were discovered later, with the first being Titan, which was observed by Christiaan Huygens in 1655.
Yes it goes Sun - Mecury - Venus - Earth - Mars - Asteroid Belt - Jupiter - Saturn - Uranus - Neptune - Pluto and Eris (New Dwarf Planet)
Generally, the larger or more massive the planet, the more moons it may have. Jupiter and Saturn are the largest and most massive and have over 60 moons each.
Not only Saturn and Jupiter have many moons, there are many planets that can have many moons because there are many solar system s in the Universe except ours.
Jupiter and Saturn each have 60 or more known moons. In Saturn's case, there are many small moonlets in the ring system. In Jupiter's case, a number of small moons (likely captured asteroids) have comparatively long and elliptical orbits far from the planet.
because their gravity is so strong that the moons are pulled in.
Mars has 2 moons, Jupiter has 79 moons, Saturn has 82 moons, Earth has 1 moon, Uranus has 27 moons, and Neptune has 14 moons.
Jupiter which has 62 moons but does not have ring while Saturn has ring and it has 33 moons.
Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune and Uranus all have more than ten moons.
Saturn has more moons than Venus. Saturn is second to Jupiter.
No, Jupiter has the most number of moons with 63 moons. Saturn is only the second with a number of 61 moons.
either saturn or jupiter but your best bet is jupiter
Jupiter has the most moons, 63. Exactly? Let's see, what day is this today? As of last count at nineplanets.org, there are 63 moons of Jupiter. However, more are being discovered every time we send a space probe there, so there may be a dozen or more that haven't been seen yet. For years, the count was "12", based on Earth-bound telescopes, but between the Hubble, the Voyager probes and the recent flyby missions, we have discovered smaller and smaller moons that had been beneath notice. It seems likely that there are a great many tiny moons of the outer planets that have not yet been catalogued.
Jupiter 63 known moons, Saturn 60 known moons, Uranus 27 known moons, Neptune 13 known moons and Pluto (no longer classed as a planet) 3 known moons.
Planet Mars has two moons