They both have moons. Saturn has many more than Earth, but they do both have them.
there both planets and there both in the solar system
they are both in our solar system
At its closest, Earth is about 796 million miles away from Saturn-------------------------------------That is when Saturn and Earth are both on the same side of the Sun and Saturn is at perihelion and Earth is at aphelion. Obviously this happens very rarely and most of the time Saturn and Earth are separated by much more distance with the maximum distance occurring when Saturn and Earth are at opposite sides of the Sun and both at aphelion.
Both are planets; both orbit the same star.
Saturn and Earth are similar because they both:are formed at about the same time,rotate around the sun,rotate on their own axis,are a planet.
Saturn - It is larger than both the earth and the moon
they both revolve around the sun, they can both be seen through a high tech telescope, and they both are planets, not dwarfs.
Earth is 1 AU from the sun. Saturn is 9.5 AU from the sun. The sun is always closer to the earth than Saturn. When the earth and Saturn are on the same side of the sun, the difference between them is 8.5 AU. When they are on opposite sides, the distance is 10.5 AU. Saturn always ranges from 8.5 to 10.5 AU from the earth, whereas the sun is never more than 1 AU away.
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.
Both red Both big 2 next largest planets after earth and are both the same size
Earth is passing Saturn in its orbit, with both planets on the same side of the Sun.
Because the Earth and Saturn both orbit the Sun, the distance between Earth and Saturn varies constantly. I use the Stellarium program to calculate the distance; as of 12:45 PM PDT on April 5, 2009 it is 8.514366 AU.