On November 24, 2011 at about 21:00 Atlantic Standard Time, Saturn was 1.563 x 109 kilometres from earth.
So far, the density of Saturn has never had the slightest effect whatsoever on any human, since no human has ever been significantly closer to Saturn than you are right now. In terms of the closest that Saturn can ever get to the earth, the farthest from earth that any human being has ever traveled into space is roughly 0.032 percent of that distance.
You can't right now. It is too far away to be seen. It was last seen from Earth in 1986 and won't be seen again until 2061.You can't right now. It is too far away to be seen. It was last seen from Earth in 1986 and won't be seen again until 2061.You can't right now. It is too far away to be seen. It was last seen from Earth in 1986 and won't be seen again until 2061.You can't right now. It is too far away to be seen. It was last seen from Earth in 1986 and won't be seen again until 2061.You can't right now. It is too far away to be seen. It was last seen from Earth in 1986 and won't be seen again until 2061.You can't right now. It is too far away to be seen. It was last seen from Earth in 1986 and won't be seen again until 2061.You can't right now. It is too far away to be seen. It was last seen from Earth in 1986 and won't be seen again until 2061.You can't right now. It is too far away to be seen. It was last seen from Earth in 1986 and won't be seen again until 2061.You can't right now. It is too far away to be seen. It was last seen from Earth in 1986 and won't be seen again until 2061.You can't right now. It is too far away to be seen. It was last seen from Earth in 1986 and won't be seen again until 2061.You can't right now. It is too far away to be seen. It was last seen from Earth in 1986 and won't be seen again until 2061.
It is the sixth one away from earth it has rings on it.I feel that it is the 6th planet from the sun and it is the 3rd planet from earth.
The planet Saturn has 95 times more mass than the planet Earth, but remarkably you would actually be lighter, not heavier, if you could stand on the clouds of Saturn. If you weigh 180 pounds on Earth you would weigh 165 pounds on Saturn. The reason for this is Saturn is much less dense than Earth. In other words, although Saturn contains 95 times more matter than Earth, that matter is spread out over a much, much vaster area. The width of Saturn is equal to the width of nine planet Earths. Saturn is blanketed by clouds and is believed to have no solid surface.
The distance from Saturn to Earth is 821,190,000 miles, or 9 AU (Astronomical Units).An average distance of 1.27749 * 109 km or 793.8 million mileshttp://idahoptv.org/ntti/nttilessons/lessons2000/lau4.htmlAs the Earth and Saturn travel their orbits around the Sun, the distance between them is constantly changing. As of March 12, 2010 at 9:28 PM PST, Saturn is 8.51558 AU distant, and is visible (weather permitting, which it is not right now!) rising in the east-southeast.Because the Earth is catching up to Saturn in its orbit, the Earth will get a little closer until July, at which time the Earth will pull ahead as it continues around the Sun.With a planetarium program like Stellarium, you can determine the distances of any astronomical objects at any time.
So far, the density of Saturn has never had the slightest effect whatsoever on any human, since no human has ever been significantly closer to Saturn than you are right now. In terms of the closest that Saturn can ever get to the earth, the farthest from earth that any human being has ever traveled into space is roughly 0.032 percent of that distance.
36million over to 250million
You can't right now. It is too far away to be seen. It was last seen from Earth in 1986 and won't be seen again until 2061.You can't right now. It is too far away to be seen. It was last seen from Earth in 1986 and won't be seen again until 2061.You can't right now. It is too far away to be seen. It was last seen from Earth in 1986 and won't be seen again until 2061.You can't right now. It is too far away to be seen. It was last seen from Earth in 1986 and won't be seen again until 2061.You can't right now. It is too far away to be seen. It was last seen from Earth in 1986 and won't be seen again until 2061.You can't right now. It is too far away to be seen. It was last seen from Earth in 1986 and won't be seen again until 2061.You can't right now. It is too far away to be seen. It was last seen from Earth in 1986 and won't be seen again until 2061.You can't right now. It is too far away to be seen. It was last seen from Earth in 1986 and won't be seen again until 2061.You can't right now. It is too far away to be seen. It was last seen from Earth in 1986 and won't be seen again until 2061.You can't right now. It is too far away to be seen. It was last seen from Earth in 1986 and won't be seen again until 2061.You can't right now. It is too far away to be seen. It was last seen from Earth in 1986 and won't be seen again until 2061.
no
No so far people can only live on earth right now.
It is the sixth one away from earth it has rings on it.I feel that it is the 6th planet from the sun and it is the 3rd planet from earth.
I think you mean orbiting not orbating. And it's right now not right know
Earth.
The planet Saturn has 95 times more mass than the planet Earth, but remarkably you would actually be lighter, not heavier, if you could stand on the clouds of Saturn. If you weigh 180 pounds on Earth you would weigh 165 pounds on Saturn. The reason for this is Saturn is much less dense than Earth. In other words, although Saturn contains 95 times more matter than Earth, that matter is spread out over a much, much vaster area. The width of Saturn is equal to the width of nine planet Earths. Saturn is blanketed by clouds and is believed to have no solid surface.
The distance from Saturn to Earth is 821,190,000 miles, or 9 AU (Astronomical Units).An average distance of 1.27749 * 109 km or 793.8 million mileshttp://idahoptv.org/ntti/nttilessons/lessons2000/lau4.htmlAs the Earth and Saturn travel their orbits around the Sun, the distance between them is constantly changing. As of March 12, 2010 at 9:28 PM PST, Saturn is 8.51558 AU distant, and is visible (weather permitting, which it is not right now!) rising in the east-southeast.Because the Earth is catching up to Saturn in its orbit, the Earth will get a little closer until July, at which time the Earth will pull ahead as it continues around the Sun.With a planetarium program like Stellarium, you can determine the distances of any astronomical objects at any time.
For the foreseeable future, thick cloud cover, cold and windy.
About 1500 right now, if I recall correctly.