Yes. Any orbit has to be flat.
No, the moons of Saturn do not orbit on the rings of Saturn. The moons orbit around Saturn in separate paths. The rings of Saturn are made up of small particles of ice and rock that orbit around Saturn along a flat plane.
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.
63 known moons orbit Jupiter.
Moons orbit around planets. They are natural satellites that are held in orbit by the planet's gravitational pull.
Jupiter doesn't orbit its moons because it has a greater mass than them.
No, the moons of Saturn do not orbit on the rings of Saturn. The moons orbit around Saturn in separate paths. The rings of Saturn are made up of small particles of ice and rock that orbit around Saturn along a flat plane.
The Sun has no moons. Moons orbit Planets > Planets orbit the Sun.
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.
63 known moons orbit Jupiter.
Moons are satellites. They orbit planets.
Not our (the Earth's) moon but Jupiter has lots of its own moons that orbit it.
27 moons orbit Uranus that we know of
Moons
Moons orbit around planets. They are natural satellites that are held in orbit by the planet's gravitational pull.
Moons orbit planets Or rather moons and planets orbit their barycenter.
Jupiter doesn't orbit its moons because it has a greater mass than them.
No, the moons of Mars (Phobos and Phoebe) orbit Mars. Jupiter is another planet and has its own moons.