Assuming 'your planet' to be Earth.
To some extent the question is meaningless because you would have to define where in the orbits the planets are to work out the instantaneous distance between them (Saturn could be on one side of the Sun and Earth on the other)
It would be more meaningful to ask the distance between the orbits of the orbital paths of the planets not the planets themselves, in which case the separation of the orbits is approximately 8 AU.
The distance from Saturn to Earth is 821,190,000 miles, or 9 AU (Astronomical Units).
No, there is no grass on Saturn. Saturn is a gas planet with no solid surface for grass to grow.
Mercury has a shorter travel time by jet from Earth compared to Saturn. This is because Mercury is much closer to Earth in terms of distance. Traveling to Saturn would take significantly longer due to its much greater distance from Earth.
The much hotter planet is Saturn. Saturn's average surface temperature is about 40 degrees Celsius above that of Neptune.
No matter where earth and Neptune are in their orbits about the sun, Neptune will always be the furthest planet from us. The reason is that the distance between Uranus and Neptune is much greater than the distance between the earth and sun.
Saturn is nearly 10 AU from the sun. (Earth is 1).
The distance from Saturn to Earth is 821,190,000 miles, or 9 AU (Astronomical Units).
No, there is no grass on Saturn. Saturn is a gas planet with no solid surface for grass to grow.
Mercury has a shorter travel time by jet from Earth compared to Saturn. This is because Mercury is much closer to Earth in terms of distance. Traveling to Saturn would take significantly longer due to its much greater distance from Earth.
Mars is the closest planet to Earth among Jupiter, Neptune, and Saturn. The distance between Earth and Mars varies due to their constantly changing positions in their orbits around the sun. Jupiter, Neptune, and Saturn are all much farther away from Earth compared to Mars.
The much hotter planet is Saturn. Saturn's average surface temperature is about 40 degrees Celsius above that of Neptune.
Saturn and Mercury are 1,375,000,000 kilometers apart. Mercury is much closer to the sun than Saturn is to the sun. The planet Earth is the third closest planet to the sun.
All stars other than our own Sun are MUCH farther from the Earth than the planet Saturn. Saturn is about 1.3 billion kilometers from Earth, whereas the nearest star is over 40 trillionkilometers, about 30,000 times as far!Our solar system extends to about 55 AU (8 billion kilometers) from the Sun, or about 1/50 of 1% of the distance to Alpha Centauri.
Saturn is nearly 10 AU from the sun. (Earth is 1).
No matter where earth and Neptune are in their orbits about the sun, Neptune will always be the furthest planet from us. The reason is that the distance between Uranus and Neptune is much greater than the distance between the earth and sun.
Saturn is usually referred to as the sixth planet out, although it technically is the seventh, from the sun. It comes after Jupiter, and before Uranus. It is one of the two gas giants, the other being Jupiter, in our system (Uranus and Neptune are sometimes referred to as gas giants, and sometimes referred to as ice giants, the latter being more acceptable, as the temperatures on Uranus and Neptune are much, much lower than those on Saturn and Jupiter).
The planet with the least mass and smallest is Mercury. The planet with the lowest density is Saturn