A year on Saturn is equivalent to about 29.5 Earth years. This is the time it takes for the planet to complete one orbit around the Sun. Saturn's long orbital period is due to its greater distance from the Sun compared to Earth.
It takes Saturn 29.46 earth years to orbit the sun (10760 days)
We know that Saturn takes about 29.4571 earth years to orbit the sun. That's pretty close to 30 years.
if those are the only 4 options then the star that is 11.9 light years away is the closest
1 hour = 3,600 secondsSpeed of light = 186,282 miles per secondTime to Saturn = 1.3 hours = (1.3 x 3,600) = 4,680 secondsDistance = (speed) x (time) = (186,282 x 4,680) = 871,799,760 milesMy almanac lists Saturn's average distance from the sun as 890.8 million miles.These numbers are only about 2% different; so your figure of 1.3 hours is good, and my math is OK.
The distance from the Earth to Saturn varies - depending on whether both planets are on the same or opposite sides of the sun. At their nearest the distance is approx 0.000127 light years.
At its furthest Saturn can be as far as 0.000175 light years(1.66 *109 km) from the Earth (175/1000000 of a l.y.)At its closes Saturn can be as near as 0.000172 light years(1.51 *109 km) from the Earth
Saturn is approximately 9.5 AU from the sun, which is about 0.00015 light years.
It's awkward to express it in light-years because it's such a small number. A more reasonable distance unit would be light-minutes. Saturn is about 80 light-minutes from the Sun on average.
The sun is approximately 1.4 billion km away from Saturn. (Exact Distance = 1,433,449,370 km )
a distance of 1.58 × 10-5 light-years).
Pollux is located approximately 34.9 light years away from the Sun.
Saturn is at a distance of about 9.5 AU from the Sun.Saturn is at a distance of about 9.5 AU from the Sun.Saturn is at a distance of about 9.5 AU from the Sun.Saturn is at a distance of about 9.5 AU from the Sun.
The Earth is 8.3 light-MINUTES(0.0000152207001522070015220700152207 light years) from the Sun.
light years.
A year on Saturn is equivalent to about 29.5 Earth years. This is the time it takes for the planet to complete one orbit around the Sun. Saturn's long orbital period is due to its greater distance from the Sun compared to Earth.
The distance from the sun to the planet Saturn is 9.948 astronomical units. This is a distance equal to 924.7 million miles.