No, General Motors terminated the Saturn project as a part of the restructuring when they were in financial trouble.
Some have suggested that shutting down Saturn was an attempt to appease the unions since Saturn was arguably the most successful GM division. Others have pointed out that Saturn was always an experiment, and as such, GM has learned quite a bit that they will now incorporate into the rest of their GM automotive line.
No it is still the planet of Saturn
Yes
No
Saturn was manufactured by General Motors. General Motors stopped manufacturing Saturn's last year as a part of their economic plan to keep the company going. That's unfortunate too, because Saturn's were perhaps the best small American car on the market.
General Motors launched the Saturn project in the late '70's or early '80's, requesting that contractors bid for construction of parts of the manufacturing facility. At that same time, GM engineers were designing the vehicle and the manufacturing process. The Saturn vehicle line was considered to be an experimental project for GM, and the Saturn models were only given letter designations, such as SL1, SL2, SC2 indicating, for example, the single or dual cam sedan or the dual cam coupe. The Saturn was an experiment also because of the cooperation between management, engineering and labor; a cooperative effort seldom seen in the automobile manufacturing industry.
r they still in business
Saturn is the planet that is still getting bigger
Nope. It's still there.
Yes. Saturn is part of our solar system. It will never leave the galaxy.
The United States once had a manufacturing base, but many manufacturing companies have moved to other countries. Though there are still manufacturing companies in the United States, the country no longer has a manufacturing base.
Jupiter and Saturn are two planets that scientists are still finding moons on. Titan is the largest moon found on Saturn.
Saturn appears to stand still in the sky due to its orbit around the Sun and Earth. As Earth moves around the Sun slightly faster than Saturn, it can appear as though Saturn is moving backwards or standing still relative to the background stars. This phenomenon is known as retrograde motion.