Jupiter has the most moons in our solar system, with a total of 79 known moons. Saturn follows closely behind with 82 known moons. No planet is known to have exactly 27 moons.
Objects such as moons or satellites that revolve around a planet are typically referred to as "natural satellites" or "moons." Artificial satellites placed in orbit around a planet are simply called "satellites."
No natural satellites of Mercury have been discovered.
there are none
Without checking the orbital inclinations of all the known planetary satellites, I'll take a rough guess that it's nominally the planet with the most known satellites, which is Jupiter, with at least 63 satellites presently known. If you want to go to the extreme, you might say that each and every stone in the rings of Saturn can certainly pass through the planet's shadow, causing a 'calcular eclipse', and there are billions of those.
Yes, Jupiter is the planet with the most satellites - 63 of them
earth
Saturn
With 160 moons, Saturn is the planet with the most moon in solar system
Yes, any planet can have satellites. Gas planets actually have the most satellites due to their large masses.
Saturn, it has at least 18 moons.
Eclipse
Saturn has thousands of rings and has the most known satellites of any planet in our solar system.
There are no known satellites of Mercury.
Uranus has 13 known rings and 27 known moons, or satellites, making it the planet with the most rings out of all the planets in our solar system.
Earth. Earth has one natural satellite, the moon, which is in orbit around the earth. There are around 3000 man made satellites currently in orbit. Jupiter has the most natural satellites (moons), over 60 have been confirmed. It has no man made satellites in orbit around it, but did have one between 1995 and 2003, an orbiter called Galileo.
If by planetary satellites you mean Moons, that would be Jupiter with at least 63 confirmed moons - possibly more!