No. your mass is the same wherever you are.
The mass of the sun is around 3500 times that of Saturn. 3500 Saturn masses = the suns mass.
Saturn is not the name of a chemical element and therefore does not have any atomic mass unit.
Your mass will stay the same no matter where you go.
Mass is a property of the object, no matter what else is around. It doesn't change, regardless of where the object is. Weight is the result of gravitational interaction between the object and something else, so it depends on what else is around. Your weight on Saturn would be different from your weight on Earth, because Saturn's mass is different from Earth'smass, and your distance from Saturn's center would be different from the distance between you and Earth's center.
Your mass is the same wherever you are, on Earth, on Saturn, on the Sun. Your weight changes if you are on a different planet.
Saturn's mass in kilograms is expressed as: 5.686 x 10^26 kg
To find how many times greater the mass of the Sun is compared to the mass of Saturn, you can divide the mass of the Sun by the mass of Saturn. The calculation is as follows: [ \text{Ratio} = \frac{1.998 \times 10^{30} \text{ kg}}{5.69 \times 10^{26} \text{ kg}} \approx 3517. ] Thus, the mass of the Sun is approximately 3517 times greater than the mass of Saturn.
Saturn's mass is 568,460*1021kg Earth's mass is 5,973.6*1021kg As mass effect gravity Saturn's gravity is stronger Earth's gravity pull is 9.8ms-2 Saturn's gravity pull is 10.4ms-2 -Thunder- Something to think about: If Saturn's mass is 95 times as much as Earth's mass, why is its gravity only 6% more ? -Lightning-
Saturn's mass is 568,460*1021kg Earth's mass is 5,973.6*1021kg As mass effect gravity Saturn's gravity is stronger Earth's gravity pull is 9.8ms-2 Saturn's gravity pull is 10.4ms-2 -Thunder- Something to think about: If Saturn's mass is 95 times as much as Earth's mass, why is its gravity only 6% more ? -Lightning-
Jupiter has greater mass than Saturn. Jupiter is the most massive planet in our solar system, with a mass more than 300 times that of Earth, while Saturn is the second most massive planet, with a mass about 95 times that of Earth.
Saturn has a mass roughly equal to 95 times the mass of Earth, so 318 Earths would be about 3.35 times the mass of Saturn.
It is both. All planets have mass.