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  1. 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.

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

    Saturn is the sixth planet from the Sun and the second-largest in the Solar System, after Jupiter. It is a gas giant with an average radius of about nine-and-a-half times that of Earth. [26] [27] It has only one-eighth the average density of Earth, but is over 95 times more massive.

    • 9.68 km/s (6.01 mi/s)
    • 10ʰ 33ᵐ 38ˢ + 1m 52s, − 1ᵐ 19ˢ 
    • 9.87 km/s (6.13 mi/s; 35,500 km/h)
    • 140 kPa
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  4. May 3, 2024 · 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.

  5. By ScienceAlert Staff. View of Saturn from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope in 2019. (NASA, ESA, A. Simon (GSFC), M.H. Wong (University of California, Berkeley) and the OPAL Team) Saturn is the sixth planet that orbits the Sun, positioned between Jupiter and Uranus at an average distance of just over 1.4 billion kilometers (about 886 million miles).

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