14 moons as of 2013,starting with nareid,apoapsis,periapsis,proteus,naiad,thalassay,despina,galatia,larissa, triton being the largest , and the new smallest s 2004n/1.
In order of proximity to Neptune:1. Naiad2. Thalassa3. Despina4. Galatea5. Larissa6. Proteus7. Triton8. Nereid9. Halimede10. Sao11. Laomedeia12. Psamthe13. Neso
Uranus has 27 known moons. In alphabetical order, they are: Ariel, Belinda, Bianca, Caliban, Cordelia, Cressida, Cupid, Desdemona, Ferdinand, Francisco, Juliet, Mab, Margaret, Miranda, Oberon, Ophelia, Perdita, Portia, Prospero, Puck, Rosalind, Setebos, Stephano, Sycorax, Titania, Trinculo, Umbriel, and Voyager 2.
Neptune has 14 known moons. Their names, in order of distance from the planet, are Naiad, Thalassa, Despina, Galatea, Larissa, Proteus, Triton, Nereid, Halimede, Sao, Laomedeia, Psamathe, Neso, and Hippocamp.
As of 2011, Uranus has 27 known moons, which are named after characters from the works by William Shakespeare and Alexander Pope.The 5 largest moons (boldface) were the earliest discovered. The 13 inner moons are involved with the 13 known rings of Uranus. [See related question.]Listed in order of increasing orbital distance from Uranus:CordeliaOpheliaBiancaCressidaDesdemonaJulietPortiaRosalindCupidBelindaPerditaPuckMabMirandaArielUmbrielTitaniaOberonFranciscoCalibanStephanoTrinculoSycoraxMargaretProsperoSetebosFerdinand.
Neptune has 11 moons. That's the nearest, but it has 13 known moons.
In order of proximity to Neptune:1. Naiad2. Thalassa3. Despina4. Galatea5. Larissa6. Proteus7. Triton8. Nereid9. Halimede10. Sao11. Laomedeia12. Psamthe13. Neso
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In order of descending size, Titan, Rhea, Iapetus, Dione, Tethys.
They are lo Ganymede.Answer:When it comes to moons Jupiter is the place to go. It has over 60, some so newly discovered they don't even have names yet, just code designations. Galileo discovered the first four: Io, Europa, Ganymede, and CallistoThe larger moons in order by their distance from Jupiter are:MetisAdrasteaAmaltheaThebeIoEuropaGanymede (the biggest)Callisto (the second biggest)Leda (the smallest)Himalia, LysitheaElaraAnankeCarmePasiphaeSinope
There are two planets with no moons, Mercury and Venus. After that the order is Earth (1), Mars (2), Neptune (14), Uranus (27), Saturn (62), and Jupiter (67).
Uranus has 27 known moons. In alphabetical order, they are: Ariel, Belinda, Bianca, Caliban, Cordelia, Cressida, Cupid, Desdemona, Ferdinand, Francisco, Juliet, Mab, Margaret, Miranda, Oberon, Ophelia, Perdita, Portia, Prospero, Puck, Rosalind, Setebos, Stephano, Sycorax, Titania, Trinculo, Umbriel, and Voyager 2.
The answer depends on the basis for numbering: distance from the sun, mass, volume, number of moons, order of discovery. Since you have not bothered to share that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
neptune is 8th in the solar system(not including pluto)
Neptune has 14 known moons. Their names, in order of distance from the planet, are Naiad, Thalassa, Despina, Galatea, Larissa, Proteus, Triton, Nereid, Halimede, Sao, Laomedeia, Psamathe, Neso, and Hippocamp.
Mercury-0 Venus-0 Earth-1 Mars-2 Ceres-0 Jupiter-63 Saturn-60 (There might be 3 more, but not discovered as moons yet) Uranus-27 Neptune-13 Pluto-3 Hameua-2 Makemake-0 Eris-1
Yes because that is how many have been recorded so far...but there most likely are more moons orbiting Jupiter...you never know..but like i said there have been 63 satellites orbiting Jupiter.
This question is incoherent.