Saturn's atmosphere consists mainly of hydrogen, helium, and trace amounts of methane, ammonia and other gases. This planet has bands of clouds in its atmosphere. However, these cloud layers are arranges in three different layers called cloud decks. Above theses clouds is a haze layer.
Actally Saturn does not have an atmosphere at all. Its 7 rings each have there own atmosphere.
Do you mean 'How would you die on Saturn?'? Saturn is very cold and there is no atmosphere - you can't breathe.
Saturn is a gas giant with very strong gravity, low temperature, and an unbreathable atmosphere, so anyone trying to land there would find it very difficult, but with sufficiently good technological support, it could be done.
Saturn is a gas giant, and the first bit of solid ground is almost at the core, where the air pressure is too great. In the atmosphere, the winds (which are over 150 mph average) would tear most structures apart, and above the atmosphere wouldn't be ON saturn. You could always live on moons near saturn.
The planet Saturn does have an atmosphere, and indeed, it consists mostly of atmosphere. The main chemical constituents of the atmosphere of Saturn are methane, ammonia, and hydrogen.
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Actally Saturn does not have an atmosphere at all. Its 7 rings each have there own atmosphere.
Yes, Saturn is all (or mostly) atmosphere.
ATMOSPHERE
Do you mean 'How would you die on Saturn?'? Saturn is very cold and there is no atmosphere - you can't breathe.
It has a gassy atmosphere because Saturn is made from it.
Saturn
Earth has a thin atmosphere. Saturn has a thick atmosphere.
I would think Saturn.
No, because Saturn has an atmosphere, but it's not the same kind of atmosphere as Earth. Humans can't breathe the atmosphere on Saturn and there's no surface on Saturn. It's made of gas.
saturn has water vapor in its atmosphere so i guess if the water would condense yes,but not drinkable to to the amonia methane and other non-breathable gasses in its atmosphere
Saturn atmosphere isn't poisonous none of the atoms our poisonous atoms