If you mean sunlight, yes. All moons and planets in the solar system get light from the sun.
Its mean distance from Saturn is 1,221,850km.Saturn is approx 1,514,000,000km from the sunSo depending on it's orbit Titan can be:Max:1,515,221,850kmMin:1,512,778,150km
Saturn has no stars. The nearest star is our sun
2,000,000 miles
sun
This question can not be awnsered because it is a moon not a planet which means that moons are all changing in distance from the sun but planets stay the the same distance from the sun
Titan is a moon of Saturn, not Pluto. Pluto's main moon is Charon. Regardless, neither Titan nor Charon are planets because they do not orbit the sun. Titan orbits the planet Saturn while Charon orbits the Pluto-Charon barycenter.
Largely because Apollo was very confused with Helios, the Titan god of the sun, where Apollo was only the god of the light (of the sun) originally. So of course Artemis was associated with Helios' sister, Selene, Titan goddess of the moon.
It varies, but the semi-major axis of Titan's orbit is about 1.22 million km. The actual distance between them would be slightly less, since Saturn itself has an equatorial radius of about 60,000 km.
Selene is a Titan goddess of the Moon, her brother is Helios the Titan god of the Sun, and her sister is Eos Titan goddess of the Dawn. Hyperion is her father, and Theia her mother.
Titan has no liquid water, no oxygen, no magnetic field, too far away from the sun (TOO COLD). Titan for sure does not support life as we know it.
Hyperion, father of Helios (the sun), Eos (dawn), and Selene (the moon).
No. Titan is Saturn's largest moon. It is larger than the planet Mercury and would be considered a planet if it had its own orbit around the sun.