Phoebe
Both Jupiter and Saturn have more than 60 moons. Saturn may have more than 200, at least 61 have secure orbits. Saturn has 34 that have been named, and 49 altogether. It could have more, depending on how small a body qualifies as a moon. Saturn has broad rings of debris, so large they are visible from earth via small telescope. Jupiter also has rings, but its rings are faint and wispy. Jupiter has the largest moon, Ganymede, and two others nearly as large. Saturn has only one moon nearly the size of Ganymede--Titan. Titan is the only moon with an appreciable atmosphere, and Titan's atmosphere has 10 times the surface pressure of earth's.
Mercury and Venus both lack natural satellites. Mars has two small ones. Jupiter and Saturn each have more than 60, with Ganymede and Titan both being larger than Mercury.
Some stars are very far, more then Saturn so they look small.
Yes, Saturn has a spectacular ring system and over 60 moons.
The mean density of Saturn is 0.687 g/cm³ For comparison, the density of water is about 0.970 g/cm³. This means if you could find a bath big enough, Saturn would float in water.
Titan will get a very small amount of heat from the Sun, a very small amount of heat from tidal pulling from Saturn and a very small amount from heat transfer from the inner regions. So for all intensive purposes, no.
Yes. But why does Titan have air and not the Earth's moon? If we say, because Titan is colder, then why do some of the large moons of Saturn and Jupiter have no air?
With an average temperature of - 288 degrees Fahrenheit, Saturn is a very cold planet. A gas giant, Saturn is composed mainly of hydrogen and a small percentage of helium. Titan is one of its satellites.
Titan is a moon of Saturn. However at the latest count (February 2016) there are 62 moons in total, several of which are named after Greek Titans.https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Saturn%27s_moons
The planet Saturn has 53 named moons (not only 23 moons), and another nine which are still being studied.Many of the moons are very small: 33 are less than 10 km in diameter and 13 moons are less than 50 km.Many of the moons are named after Titans, giants, or minor Greek or Roman gods.Some of Saturn's moons are very large; the moon Titan is bigger than the planet Mercury.
Both Jupiter and Saturn have more than 60 moons. Saturn may have more than 200, at least 61 have secure orbits. Saturn has 34 that have been named, and 49 altogether. It could have more, depending on how small a body qualifies as a moon. Saturn has broad rings of debris, so large they are visible from earth via small telescope. Jupiter also has rings, but its rings are faint and wispy. Jupiter has the largest moon, Ganymede, and two others nearly as large. Saturn has only one moon nearly the size of Ganymede--Titan. Titan is the only moon with an appreciable atmosphere, and Titan's atmosphere has 10 times the surface pressure of earth's.
Although each of the four gas giants has a ring system, Saturn's ring system is by far the most spectacular. Saturn also has over 60 moons, ranging from small moonlets a few km across, to Titan, which is large enough to have its own atmosphere.
The moons of Saturn are numerous and diverse, ranging from tiny moonlets to the enormous Titan. Saturn has 61 moons with confirmed orbits, 53 of which have names, and most of which are quite small. There are also hundreds of known moonlets embedded within Saturn's rings.For a complete listing of the moons, and associated data see the Wikipedia article in the reference.
It comes from the Latin word, "gnomus," denoting a mythical race of very small people who were said to inhabit parts of Ethiopia and India.
Saturn has 61 moons most of which are quite small. Particularly notable are Titan, with an earth-like atmosphere and a landscape including hydrocarbon lakes and river networks, and Enceladus, which may harbor liquid water under its south pole.
Without proper protection, no. It's possible a floating colony could be made, providing breathable air and protection from the elements, but a human by him or herself could not survive on Saturn.
Saturn has 61 identified moons with secure orbits, but we don't know for sure if there are more to yet be discovered. There are millions of smaller rocks and particles orbiting the planet - in the planets extensive ring system. These could be describes as satellites. There is also one artificial satellite in orbit around the planet called Cassini-Huygens, which was put there in 2004 and is still there today.