saturn is mostly like jupiter lots of gasses and very very veery very cold
We know next-to-nothing about the surface of Saturn. We can guess that something at least resembling gravel exists there, because it exists on Saturn's moon Titan.
The surface gravity is 10.44 ms-2.
No. Saturn is a gas planet. It has no distinguishable surface, instead it has an atmosphere that just gets thicker and thicker the deeper you go, so there is no real solid surface for there to be any craters to form on. Incoming rocks would just burn/break up in the dense atmosphere.
Saturn's surface area is approximately 42.7 billion square kilometers.
Saturn appears in the sky as a yellow, starlike object of the first magnitude. When viewed through a telescope, it is seen as a golden sphere, crossed by a series of lightly colored bands parallel to the equator. Saturn's consists of a rocky core, a liquid metallic hydrogen layer, and a molecular hydrogen layer. Traces of various ices have also been detected.
Saturn (and the other gas giants) don't really HAVE a "surface" on which you could stand on, as on Earth.
The surface is open to the exterior.
Surface temperature? Saturn probably doesn't HAVE a "surface".
Saturn is a gas planet, so it has no surface
Saturn does not really have a surface. The only hard part of Saturn is its rocky core. The "surface" of Saturn is actually hydrogen and helium kept in a spherical shape by the planet's gravity.
Saturn is a gas giant and has no solid surface.
Saturn is a gas giant planet, it has no solid surface.
Saturn has no surface. Nor do the other gas giants.
saturn is the what planet from the sun
no because it is made of gas and the surface is not solid.
Living on Saturn is not feasible due to its extreme atmospheric pressures, lack of a solid surface, and harsh weather conditions. Scientists are more focused on exploring Saturn's moons, such as Titan and Enceladus, which may have conditions more conducive to supporting life.
The planet Saturn does not have a solid surface. Saturn is almost entirely made up of gases, hydrogen and helium.