No - Saturn is a giant ball of gas and liquid goo.
Saturn is a gas giant, and has no surface on which oceans could form. On some of its frigid moons, notably Titan, there may be seas filled with liquefied hydrocarbon gases such as ethane.
In a sense. Saturn is a gas giant. As you go deeper into Saturn's atmosphere, the hydrogen that makes up most of the planet becomes compressed into a liquid.
No. Saturn does not have a solid surface whatsoever and also has no water.
No
Yes. Saturn is the second largest planet in the solar system in terms of both diameter and mass.
Saturn
Earth is a rocky (land) planet. The gas planets are beyond Mars (i.e. Jupiter & Saturn)
No. Space probes have orbited and flown by Saturn, but nothing can land there. Saturn is a gas planet, and therefore does not have a definite surface.
The planet that has a moon named Titan is Saturn.
Yes. Saturn is the second largest planet in the solar system in terms of both diameter and mass.
It is both. All planets have mass.
Saturn is a gas planet. It does not have a surface to land on.
Saturn is the larger planet by far, but because Saturn is made 99% of gas, Uranus has more mass.
No. Saturn comes in second place to Jupiter.
Your mass is the same wherever you are, on Earth, on Saturn, on the Sun. Your weight changes if you are on a different planet.
Yes, Saturn does weigh more than Earth. Earth's mass is 5.97224 kg while Saturn's mass is 568.324 kg. Saturn consists of 95.16 Earth masses.
The planet with the least mass and smallest is Mercury. The planet with the lowest density is Saturn
Saturn
Earth is a rocky (land) planet. The gas planets are beyond Mars (i.e. Jupiter & Saturn)
No space mission has landed on Saturn because the planet doesn't have a surface to land on. However, the Cassini-Huygens mission did land a probe on Titan, Saturn's largest moon.
No, because Saturn has no solid surface. Saturn is the second largest jovian planet, a gas giant.