It just has a massive amount of angular momentum, like Jupiter.
We generally do not know "why" many things are the way that they are. Saturn rotates once in about 10 hours. We don't know why. It just IS.
A day in Saturn is 10 hours and 40 minutes just in one day while it rbits the sun
Saturn's rotational period is just over ten hours. This means that it does spin on its axis much faster than Earth, especially considering its larger size.
It takes about 29.5 Earth years for Saturn to revolve around the Sun.
That depends on when you set the starting point of your observation. Saturn's year is 29.46 Earth years long. So it will have just now completed one full solar orbit if you are 30 years old. Saturn has been known since prehistoric times, but Galileo was the first to observe it with a telescope in 1610. Since then it has completed 13 orbits and is approximately half way through it's 14th.
Just the sun. Like Earth is still Earth, Saturn is Saturn...
A year on Saturn lasts about 10,759 Earth days (29.46 Earth years). Using the average length of a "day" on Saturn of 10 hours, 34 minutes (time for rotation outside the equatorial zone), this is about 24,491 Saturn days.
To answer this question we need to know from where on Earth you will be looking for Saturn.
If Saturn was a bed sheet, Earth would be a handkerchief. Earth is just a troublesome little rock compared to the big boulder Saturn. Another way, Earth would be a Pekinese, and Saturn would be a Bernese Mountain Dog.
Saturn spins faster than Earth due to its unique formation and composition. As a gas giant, Saturn is primarily made up of hydrogen and helium, which allows it to maintain a lower density and rotate more rapidly without structural constraints. Additionally, during its formation, Saturn likely accumulated angular momentum more efficiently than terrestrial planets like Earth, leading to its faster rotation. This rapid spin results in a day on Saturn lasting just about 10.7 hours, compared to Earth's 24-hour day.
It takes almost 30 Earth years for Saturn to go around the sun once. So, 1 year on Saturn = 29.6 years on Earth. When you turn 29 and a half, Saturn will be back in the same place it was the day you were born!
uhhm lets see Saturn is biger farther away from the sun also it takes Saturn awhile longer to rotate cause its farther away and earth has living things on earth and its the only planet known as the "LIVING PLANET"