No; closer to two times.
Saturn is much bigger than Uranus. Its diameter is more than twice as large (even without the rings) at 120,000 kilometers to 51,000 for Uranus. Saturn is more than six times as massive as Uranus (95 times Earth compared to 14.5 Earths).
Depending on where the two planets are in their orbits, they may be on the same side of the Sun (closer) or on opposite sides of the Sun (farther away). Saturn's average orbital distance is 1.43 billion kilometers while Uranus is about twice as far away at an average of 2.75 billion kilometers.The very minimum distance (which only occurs once every few hundred Earth years) is about 1,235,000,000 kilometers (1.2 billion kilometers, or about 8 times the distance from Earth to the Sun).Every 44 Earth years, as Saturn orbits, the minimum falls into the range of 1.4 to 1.5 billion kilometers.The planets are also very rarely their farthest apart, about 4.26 billion kilometers, which has not occurred during the time humans have been observing the two planets.The average distance between saturn and uranus is 1455 million km or 1,4 billion km.
If you're referring to Titan the Moon of Saturn, i have no idea and the distance would be an average distance the would mean nothing because Saturn usually on the far side of the sun from Uranus.
The four in our solar system with the largest orbits are Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.
Saturn's greater mass is compensated by its lower density. Stated another way, if you are on Saturn's "surface" (it doesn't really have any proper surface like the Earth), the center of Saturn is far away.
Saturn is much bigger than Uranus. Its diameter is more than twice as large (even without the rings) at 120,000 kilometers to 51,000 for Uranus. Saturn is more than six times as massive as Uranus (95 times Earth compared to 14.5 Earths).
Saturn is the larger planet by far, but because Saturn is made 99% of gas, Uranus has more mass.
Depending on where the two planets are in their orbits, they may be on the same side of the Sun (closer) or on opposite sides of the Sun (farther away). Saturn's average orbital distance is 1.43 billion kilometers while Uranus is about twice as far away at an average of 2.75 billion kilometers.The very minimum distance (which only occurs once every few hundred Earth years) is about 1,235,000,000 kilometers (1.2 billion kilometers, or about 8 times the distance from Earth to the Sun).Every 44 Earth years, as Saturn orbits, the minimum falls into the range of 1.4 to 1.5 billion kilometers.The planets are also very rarely their farthest apart, about 4.26 billion kilometers, which has not occurred during the time humans have been observing the two planets.The average distance between saturn and uranus is 1455 million km or 1,4 billion km.
If you're referring to Titan the Moon of Saturn, i have no idea and the distance would be an average distance the would mean nothing because Saturn usually on the far side of the sun from Uranus.
The planets far away from the sun like Jupiter,Saturn,Uranus and Neptune
The four in our solar system with the largest orbits are Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.
Saturn's greater mass is compensated by its lower density. Stated another way, if you are on Saturn's "surface" (it doesn't really have any proper surface like the Earth), the center of Saturn is far away.
5.2 AU, that is five and one-fifth times as far as the Earth. Saturn is 9.5 AU, Uranus 19 AU and Neptune 29 AU.
Yes. The four gas planets in the solar system, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, all have rings. Saturn's are by far the most visible.
The closest would probably be Saturn, which has a diameter of around 120 536 km, which is 9.45x Earth's diameter (12 756.2 km). The next closest is Jupiter, with a radius of 142 984 km, or 11.2x Earth's diameter.
Saturn and Uranus are in independent orbits, and the distance between them can vary. Saturn is about 1.4 billion miles from the Sun, and Uranus is about 2.9 billion miles. Therefore, when Saturn and Uranus are in conjunction (on the same side of the sun) they could be as close as 2.9 - 1.4 = 1.5 billion miles from each other. At opposition, (On opposite sides of the sun) they could be as far as 2.9 + 1.4 = 4.3 billion miles from each other. (This is all approximate). On May 29, 2014, Saturn and Uranus are about 4.27 billion miles apart (They are very near opposition).
Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus's, and Neptune.