The diameter of Saturn at its equator is 116,464 km and its circumference is about 365,882 km.
Saturn's equatorial diameter is 120,536 km, so multiply by pi (approximately 3.1416) to get a circumference of 378,675.9 km. Converting km to miles, 378 675.9 kilometers = 235,298.3 miles
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Circumference is Pi x Diameter so do Circumference divided by Pi to get the diameter :)
diameter = circumference/pi
circumference = diameter * pi. Therefore, diameter = circumference ÷ pi.
Circumference = pi*diameter So diameter = circumference/pi = 1.59 units
Yes because: circumference/diameter = pi and circumference = pi*diameter
Saturn's diameter is 120,536 km.
Saturn.
The diameter of Saturn is 120,536 km, not counting the rings.
Saturn's equatorial circumference is 235,298 miles, or 378,675 kilometers. Saturn's equatorial radius is 60,268 kilometers. It is the second largest planet in the Solar System.
Venus
The average diameter of Saturn is 71,229 miles and the equatorial circumference of Saturn is 235,300 miles. The surface temperature of Saturn is -218 degrees Fahrenheit.
Yes. Saturn is the second largest planet in the solar system in terms of both diameter and mass.
Mercury
If the scale Merriam of the Sun is 3000 mm, then the scale diameter of Saturn would be 274.2 mm.
C = 9,525 miles D = 3,032 miles
Much smaller. Consider, the diameter of the rings of Saturn are larger than Saturn itself, and Saturn is the second largest planet in the solar system. The rings of Saturn have a diameter of about 280,000 Kilometers. Charon has a diameter of about 1,200 kilometers. In other words the rings of Saturn are are more than 200 times larger than Charon.
Circumference is Pi x Diameter so do Circumference divided by Pi to get the diameter :)