All moons are natural satellites that orbit around a planet, they lack an atmosphere, they reflect light from the sun, they have varying surface features such as craters and mountains, and they affect tidal patterns on their parent planet.
Pluto has three moons and there names are Charon, Hydra, and Nix
Uranus has at least 27 moons that we know of.
In our solar system and likely all others Gas Giants. There are only 2 Terrestrial Planets with moons, The Earth and Mars they are Luna (The Moon), Phobos and Deimos. Jupiter has 67 Known moons Saturn has 62 Known moons Uranus has 27 Known moons Neptune has 13 Known moons On a side note Pluto which is a dwarf planet has 5 moons Charon, Niz, Hydra, P4 and P5
I do not understand your question, but I can tell you that Neptune has 13 moons and Pluto has 3.
Jupiter has those, plus at least 48 more satellites.
There are planets that have more than 5 moons, but none that we know of that have 5 exactly.
Pluto has three moons and there names are Charon, Hydra, and Nix
They are all prime numbers. They are all consecutive odd numbers They are all factors of 105
Neptune has 14 known moons.
Honey Moons is 5' 3".
Pluto has 5 moons, Mercury has 0.
Yes, 5 of its 27 moons.
If you're looking for the "greatest" of anything, you can only expect one of them.Two or more things can't all be the "greatest".All of the common factors of 140 and 25 are 1 and 5.The greatest one is 5 .
No. Pluto has 5 moons. Jupiter has 63 confirmed moons as of 2017.
There are at least 5 known or theorized volcanic moons in our solar system. The Moon, Jupiter's moon Io, Saturn's moons Enceladus and Titan, and Neptune's moon Triton are all volcanic.
It's not at all common, but with 7 billion people on the planet, things that aren't at all common have happened before. The youngest confirmed birth mother was slightly over 5 and a half.
Water soluble things are all the things that get dissolved in water completely and homogeneously. A few common examples are salt, sugar, alum, copper sulphate and powdered milk.