Yes, much more. The average distance of Earth from the Sun is the Astronomical Unit (AU).
Five planets are more than 1 AU from the Sun:
Mars average : 1.5 AU
Jupiter average: 5.2 AU
Saturn average: 9.6 AU
Uranus average : 19.2 AU
Neptune average: 30.1 AU
The Sun is 3504.69 times more massive than Saturn
The gravitational pull from Jupiter to the sun is stronger than the gravitational pull from Saturn to the sun. This is because Jupiter is more massive than Saturn, so it exerts a greater gravitational force over larger distances.
Both Jupiter and Saturn vary their distance from the sun as they move in their orbits. Jupiter ranges from 4.9 to 5.4 AU from the sun Saturn ranges from 9.0 to 10,1 AU from the sun. So at times Jupiter is more than halfway to saturn from the sun and at other times it is less. It would probably be best to say that the orbit of Jupiter is about halfway from the sun to the orbit of Saturn
its is murceryneptune
Pluto orbits the sun, as does Saturn, but Saturn is closer to the sun than Pluto is, so Pluto has much further to go to orbit the sun. Pluto's orbit is longer than Saturn's.
Saturn is titled unevenly on its axis and away from the Sun than Earth and has more days to make a year in Earth.
Jupiter isn't farther than either. Jupiter is the 5th planet from the Sun, Saturn is the 6th planet from the Sun, & Uranus is the 7th planet from the Sun.
The planet that orbits the sun closer than Saturn but farther away than Mars is Jupiter. Jupiter is the fifth planet from the Sun and is located between Mars and Saturn in terms of its distance from the Sun.
No, the Sun is much bigger than Saturn. The Sun is a star and is about 109 times the diameter of Earth, whereas Saturn is a planet and is only about 9.5 times the diameter of Earth.
Mar, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.
Yes it is. A year on Saturn is about 29 of our years.
it takes saturn longer to revolve around the sun