The Sun doesn't have "moons".
The term "moon" applies to satellites of planets or planetoids. An object orbiting the Sun is classified as a planet, dwarf planet, asteroid, comet, or a Kuiper Belt object.
The average distance is 57.9 million kilometres.
Asteroids orbit the sun. Moons orbit planets and planets orbit the sun. So you could say the moons orbit the sun. However, moons are kept in their orbits by the gravity of their planet and planets are kept in orbit by the gravity of the sun. So in that sense, moons do not orbit the sun.
The planets are satellites of the sun. The moons are satellites of the planets. The moons revolve around the planets captured by their gravity, while the planets revolve around the sun captured by its gravity and the sun.
Mercury has no moons. The planet's proximity to the Sun, along with its weak gravitational field, makes it difficult for it to capture or retain any celestial bodies as moons. Additionally, any potential moons would likely be destabilized by the Sun's strong gravitational influence.
No. Comets are not moons as they orbit the sun, not planets.
There are no moons on the sun.
The Sun has no moons. Moons orbit Planets > Planets orbit the Sun.
The sun has no moons. Moons are natural satellites of a planet. The equivalent structure for suns is planets themselves.
One sun, 62 moons.
The Sun is a star and does not have any moons. Moons typically orbit around planets, not stars.
Tatooine is a two-sun planet with three moons.
There are 180 moons in our solar system.
Venus, the 2nd planet from the sun, does not have any moons.
The average distance is 57.9 million kilometres.
The volume of the Sun is 3.4 x 1017The volume of the Moon is 2.195 x 1010Therefore, you could fit x Moons in the Sun
This question is incoherent.
The sun has 8 or 9 major planets and thousands of smaller objects orbiting around it. Some of the planets have many moons. (eg Neptune has 13) It can have moons but so far all of the moons are to close to the planets to get caught in the sun's orbit.