Four planets hold this distinction:
Jupiter (9 hours, 55 minutes)
Saturn (10 hours, 33 minutes)
Uranus (17 hours, 14 minutes)
Neptune (16 hours, 6 minutes)
i meant planet Earth has fewer because Earth has only 1 satellite and Uranus has 27 satellites.
Mercury is the planet with fewer moons than Jupiter. Mercury does not have any moons, while Jupiter has at least 79 known moons.
A year on Venus is shorter than a year on Earth, but a "day" on Venus is much longer than a day on Earth. I'm not sure exactly what you were trying to ask, but that should about cover it.
The planet that fits all three criteria—larger than Earth, has moons, and has a day longer than 24 hours—is Mars. Mars has a day (known as a sol) that lasts about 24 hours and 37 minutes. It is larger than Earth in terms of its overall volume and has two small moons, Phobos and Deimos.
A planet with active volcanoes will have fewer craters, as older craters will tend to be buried by lava and ash.
i meant planet Earth has fewer because Earth has only 1 satellite and Uranus has 27 satellites.
Mercury is the planet with fewer moons than Jupiter. Mercury does not have any moons, while Jupiter has at least 79 known moons.
because it is closest planet to earth and its day is of 25 hours very close to earth.
A year on Venus is shorter than a year on Earth, but a "day" on Venus is much longer than a day on Earth. I'm not sure exactly what you were trying to ask, but that should about cover it.
The planet that fits all three criteria—larger than Earth, has moons, and has a day longer than 24 hours—is Mars. Mars has a day (known as a sol) that lasts about 24 hours and 37 minutes. It is larger than Earth in terms of its overall volume and has two small moons, Phobos and Deimos.
A planet with active volcanoes will have fewer craters, as older craters will tend to be buried by lava and ash.
Eris is not a planet; it is a dwarf planet. It is much smaller than Earth.
No planet really does have a day "the same length as Earth", but Mars definitely has the one that's the closest. The day length of Mars is just over half an hour longer than Earth's.
The planet that is further from the Sun than Earth but closer than Jupiter is Mars. Mars is the fourth planet from the Sun, situated between Earth and Jupiter.
Mercury is the first planet from the sun, and Earth is the third planet from the sun; Venus is the second planet from the sun, making it farther than Mercury but closer than Earth.
Mercury and Venus have no moons, the earth has one, mars has a few, and the gas planets have dozens
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