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  1. Nov 14, 2012 · The mean radius of the body of Saturn is 36,184 miles (58,232 kilometers). However, the giant planet spins swiftly, completing a "day" in just over ten and a half hours.

  2. With an equatorial diameter of about 74,897 miles (120,500 kilometers), Saturn is 9 times wider than Earth. If Earth were the size of a nickel, Saturn would be about as big as a volleyball. From an average distance of 886 million miles (1.4 billion kilometers), Saturn is 9.5 astronomical units away from the Sun.

  3. Size and Distance. Size and Distance. With a radius of 36,183.7 miles (58,232 kilometers), Saturn is 9 times wider than Earth. If Earth were the size of a nickel, Saturn would be about as big as a volleyball. From an average distance of 886 million miles (1.4 billion kilometers), Saturn is 9.5 astronomical units away from the Sun.

    • Overview
    • Basic astronomical data

    The Italian astronomer Galileo in 1610 was the first to observe Saturn with a telescope. Although he saw a strangeness in Saturn’s appearance, the low resolution of his instrument did not allow him to discern the true nature of the planet’s rings.

    How far is Saturn from Earth?

    Saturn orbits the Sun at a mean distance of 1,427,000,000 km (887 million miles). Its closest distance to Earth is about 1.2 billion km (746 million miles), and its phase angle—the angle that it makes with the Sun and Earth—never exceeds about 6°. Saturn, seen from the vicinity of Earth, thus always appears nearly fully illuminated.

    What feature is Saturn known for?

    Saturn is surrounded by a ring system. The entire ring system spans nearly 26,000,000 km (16,000,000 miles) when the faint outer rings are included. When viewed through even a small telescope, the planet encircled by its magnificent rings is arguably the most sublime object in the solar system.

    What is Saturn's largest moon?

    Saturn orbits the Sun at a mean distance of 1,427,000,000 km (887 million miles). Its closest distance to Earth is about 1.2 billion km (746 million miles), and its phase angle—the angle that it makes with the Sun and Earth—never exceeds about 6°. Saturn seen from the vicinity of Earth thus always appears nearly fully illuminated. Only deep space probes can provide sidelit and backlit views.

    Like Jupiter and most of the other planets, Saturn has a regular orbit—that is, its motion around the Sun is prograde (in the same direction that the Sun rotates) and has a small eccentricity (noncircularity) and inclination to the ecliptic, the plane of Earth’s orbit. Unlike Jupiter, however, Saturn’s rotational axis is tilted substantially—by 26.7°—to its orbital plane. The tilt gives Saturn seasons, as on Earth, but each season lasts more than seven years. Another result is that Saturn’s rings, which lie in the plane of its equator, are presented to observers on Earth at opening angles ranging from 0° (edge on) to nearly 30°. The view of Saturn’s rings cycles over a 30-year period. Earth-based observers can see the rings’ sunlit northern side for about 15 years and then, in an analogous view, the sunlit southern side for the next 15 years. In the short intervals when Earth crosses the ring plane, the rings are all but invisible.

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    Saturn’s rotation period was very difficult to determine. Cloud motions in its massive upper atmosphere trace out a variety of periods, which are as short as about 10 hours 10 minutes near the equator and increase with some oscillation to about 30 minutes longer at latitudes higher than 40°. Scientists attempted to determine the rotation period of Saturn’s deep interior from that of its magnetic field, which is presumed to be rooted in the planet’s metallic-hydrogen outer core. However, direct measurement of the field’s rotation was difficult because the field is highly symmetrical around the rotational axis. At the time of the Voyager encounters, radio outbursts from Saturn, apparently related to small irregularities in the magnetic field, showed a period of 10 hours 39.4 minutes; this value was taken to be the magnetic field rotation period. Measurements made 25 years later by the Cassini spacecraft indicated that the field was rotating with a period 6–7 minutes longer. It was believed that the solar wind is responsible for some of the difference between these two measurements of the rotational period. Not until Cassini flew inside Saturn’s rings on its final orbits was the rotation period accurately measured. By relating waves observed in the rings to slight variations in Saturn’s gravitational field, the rotation period of the planet was determined to be 10 hours 33 minutes 38 seconds. The time differences between the rotation periods of Saturn’s clouds and of its interior have been used to estimate wind velocities (see below The atmosphere).

    Because the four giant planets have no solid surface in their outer layers, by convention the values for the radius and gravity of these planets are calculated at the level at which one bar of atmospheric pressure is exerted. By this measure, Saturn’s equatorial diameter is 120,536 km (74,898 miles). In comparison, its polar diameter is only 108,728 km (67,560 miles), or 10 percent smaller, which makes Saturn the most oblate (flattened at the poles) of all the planets in the solar system. Its oblate shape is apparent even in a small telescope. Even though Saturn rotates slightly slower than Jupiter, it is more oblate because its rotational acceleration cancels a larger fraction of the planet’s gravity at the equator. The equatorial gravity of the planet, 896 cm (29.4 feet) per second per second, is only 74 percent of its polar gravity. Saturn is 95 times as massive as Earth but occupies a volume 766 times greater. Its mean density of 0.69 gram per cubic cm is thus only some 12 percent of Earth’s. Saturn’s equatorial escape velocity—the velocity needed for an object, which includes individual atoms and molecules, to escape the planet’s gravitational attraction at the equator without having to be further accelerated—is nearly 36 km per second (80,000 miles per hour) at the one-bar level, compared with 11.2 km per second (25,000 miles per hour) for Earth. This high value indicates that there has been no significant loss of atmosphere from Saturn since its formation. For additional orbital and physical data, see the table.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › SaturnSaturn - Wikipedia

    Even though Saturn is nearly the size of Jupiter, Saturn has less than one-third of Jupiter's mass. Saturn orbits the Sun at a distance of 9.59 AU (1,434 million km ) with an orbital period of 29.45 years.

  5. May 20, 2024 · Saturn. Earth. Saturn is 9.1x larger than Earth. DATE OF DISCOVERY. Unknown. DISCOVERED BY. Known by the Ancients. AVERAGE ORBIT DISTANCE. 886,489,415 miles. 92,956,050 miles. MEAN ORBIT VELOCITY. 21,562 mph. 66,622 mph. ORBIT ECCENTRICITY. 0.05386179. 0.01671123. EQUATORIAL INCLINATION. 26.7 degrees. 23.4393 degrees. EQUATORIAL RADIUS.

  6. nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov › planetary › factsheetSaturn Fact Sheet - NSSDCA

    Jan 11, 2024 · Saturn Earth Ratio (Saturn/Earth) Mass (10 24 kg) 568.32: 5.9722: 95.16: Volume (10 10 km 3) 82,713: 108.321: 763.59: Equatorial radius (1 bar level) (km) 60,268: 6,378.1: 9.449: Polar radius (1 bar level) (km) 54,364: 6,356.8: 8.552: Volumetric mean radius (km) 58,232: 6,371.0: 9.140: Ellipticity (Flattening) 0.09796: 0.00335: 29.24: Mean ...

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