Table of Contents
- 1 What is the relationship between mass and the number of moons a planet has?
- 2 What is the relationship between planets and moons?
- 3 What is the relationship between the mass of the planets and the relative strength of their gravitational pull?
- 4 What general relationship exists between a planet’s mass and density?
- 5 What is the term used to describe the relationship between planets?
- 6 Does more mass mean more moons?
- 7 Can a more massive planet have more moons?
- 8 Which is the closest moon to the planet Mars?
What is the relationship between mass and the number of moons a planet has?
The figure shows that the number of the moons of the soil planets is directly proportional to their distance from the Sun but have no relation with their mass until we reach Jupiter. From Jupiter, the number of moons of the planets decreases with increasing their distance from the Sun and decreasing their mass.
What is the relationship between a planet’s number of moons and its mass suggest a reason for your answer?
What is the general relation between the numbers of moons a planet has compared to its mass? The bigger the mass, the more moons.
What is the relationship between planets and moons?
There is a very basic difference between the two: A planet revolves around the Sun and a moon orbits a planet. Technically, the moon also orbits the Sun as it spins around its planet, but because it has its own sub-orbit of a planet scientists define it as a moon.
Do planets with more mass have more moons?
For a short answer: The giant planets have more moons than the terrestrial planets because of their great masses which result in stronger gravitational fields. And giant planets also occupy greater space and hold larger volumes of mass in their surrounding atmospheres.
What is the relationship between the mass of the planets and the relative strength of their gravitational pull?
the relationship between the mass of the planets and the relative strength of their gravitational pull is that the more mass. the more gravitational pull.
What is the relationship between a planets size and its gravity?
A planet’s size and mass determines its gravitational pull. A planet’s mass and size determines how strong its gravitational pull is. Models can help us experiment with the motions of objects in space, which are determined by the gravitational pull between them.
What general relationship exists between a planet’s mass and density?
Mass is proportional to gravitational pull. What general relation exist between a planet size and its density? The larger the planet, the smaller the density.
Why are there planets with two or more moons?
Why some planets have many moons is basically because of their size. The planets in our solar system that have more moons are the large planets, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. They’re so big that they can collect a lot of moon. If comets swing by them, they can sometimes absorb comets, they can grab asteroids.
What is the term used to describe the relationship between planets?
A planet (or asteroid or comet) is simply said to be in conjunction, when it is in conjunction with the Sun, as seen from the Earth. The Moon is in conjunction with the Sun at New Moon.
Why do some planets have two or more moons?
Why some planets have many moons is basically because of their size. The planets in our solar system that have more moons are the large planets, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. They’re so big that they can collect a lot of moon. Mars probably has two because there’s a big asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.
Does more mass mean more moons?
The greater an object’s mass, the more gravitational force it exerts. So, to begin answering your question, Earth has a greater gravitational pull than the moon simply because the Earth is more massive. That’s why the moon isn’t pulled out of Earth’s orbit by the gravity of larger planets or by the sun.
Is there a connection between the mass of a planet and the moons?
Only roughly, at best, of what could or should be there for moons. This is hard to answer because instinctually the answer is no (for me), yet there is reason to say yes. The obvious connection is that a massive planet has more gravity, and gravity is what keeps moons in orbit.
Can a more massive planet have more moons?
This is hard to answer because instinctually the answer is no (for me), yet there is reason to say yes. The obvious connection is that a massive planet has more gravity, and gravity is what keeps moons in orbit. But this does boy mean a more massive planet will have more moons. It has to collect or create them, and not destroy them.
Is there a limit to how many moons a planet can have?
There’s no limit to asteroid/planetesimal capture over long enough spans, if the gravity well is large enough. In between, there is co-formation — which seems to be limited to around half a dozen moons for planets similar in size to our gas giants.
Which is the closest moon to the planet Mars?
I believe that Phobos, one of Mars two moons is the closest moon to its parent planet. Phobos resides about 9,400 kilometres from Mars. And as regards the farthest moon from its parent planet, I think that accolade belongs to Neso, one of Neptune’s moons. Neso is 49,500,000 kilometres from Neptune.