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Quick fact about our neighborhood: the Solar System has 8 planets — and none of them are truly “alone”… except two.Jupiter has 92 moons. Saturn has 274 moons. Uranus has 29 moons. Neptune has 16 moons.Even Mars has moons. Earth has one. Now here’s the twist: the two planets closest to the Sun — Mercury and Venus — have none. No natural satellites. No companions. Just bare worlds orbiting in the Sun’s strongest gravitational zone. So why do almost all planets end up with moons… while Mercury and Venus don’t? And what does that tell us about how moons form, how orbits stay stable, and how violent the early Solar System really was? In this video, we’ll break it down in a way that’s simple, but scientifically honest. -- DISCUSSIONS & SOCIAL MEDIA Commercial Purposes: insanecuriositybusiness@gmail.com Tik Tok: / insanecuriosity Reddit: / insanecuriosity Instagram: / insanecuriositythereal Twitter: / insanecurio Facebook: / insanecuriosity Linkedin: / insane-curiosity-46b928277 Our Website: https://insanecuriosity.com/ -- Credits: Ron Miller, Mark A. Garlick / MarkGarlick.com ,Elon Musk/SpaceX/ Flickr -- 00:00 Intro 1:03 The Solar System Doesn't Care What Forms — It Cares What Survive 2:19 what are satellites? 2:40 How do moons form? 5:00 Mercury: Too close, top small, too unstable 6:47 Venus: the Sun’s influence, plus a second complication 8:50 Why Earth kept a moon, and why that matters -- #insanecuriosity #solarystemplanets #moons