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SATURN

The sixth planet from the Sun and the jewel of the Solar System — a giant of gas crowned by the most spectacular ring system ever seen, and a family of moons that may hide oceans of their own. Scroll to decode the data.
SATURN · RA 21ʰ34ᵐ · DEC −14°20′ · Ø 120,536 KM
PLANET PROFILE · 06 OF 08

THE JEWEL

Saturn is the sixth planet and the second largest — a gas giant famous for the brightest, broadest ring system in the Solar System. Around it orbits a swarm of moons, including Titan, the only moon with a thick atmosphere and standing liquid on its surface.

DIAMETER 120,536 km9.45 × Earth
MASS 5.68×10²⁶ kg95 × Earth
GRAVITY 10.44 m/s²1.06 g
DAY 10h 42mfast spin
YEAR 29.5 yrsEarth years
AVG TEMP −139 °Ccloud tops
DISTANCE ☉ 1.43B km9.5 AU
MOONS 146Titan largest

THE RINGS

Saturn's rings stretch 280,000 km across yet are often only 10 metres thick. They are made of billions of chunks of water ice and rock, from grains of dust to house-sized boulders, all orbiting in dazzling, gravity-sculpted bands. Likely the shattered remains of a moon or comet.

LIGHT ENOUGH TO FLOAT

Saturn is the least dense planet in the Solar System — less dense than water. Drop it in a giant ocean and it would float. Despite being 95 times Earth's mass, it is almost entirely hydrogen and helium with no solid surface to stand on.

TITAN — A WORLD OF ITS OWN

Saturn's largest moon Titan is bigger than Mercury and the only moon with a thick atmosphere. Beneath orange haze lie rivers, lakes and seas of liquid methane — the only other place in the Solar System with stable liquid on its surface. A frontier within a frontier.

“The crown of the Solar System — proof that beauty and the frontier are the same direction.”

— CEO GALILEO