Saturn is in our galaxy, the Milky Way. Answer Saturn is indeed in the Milky Way, a spiral galaxy containing billions of stars and the particular star, the Sun at the centre of the Solar System we inhabit which contains all the planets from Mercury to Neptune and many dwarf planets and plutons like Pluto.
Uranus is in our galaxy, the Milky Way. Everything you can see in the sky at night without a telescope, all the planets and stars are all in our galaxy.
Yes, asteroids can hit Saturn. Saturn, like all planets, attracts asteroids due to its gravitational pull. Some may crash into Saturn, while others may get pulled into its orbit as moons or break apart in its rings.
There are three theories on how Saturn got its rings: 1. Gravitational disruption of satellites: Saturn's gravitational pull tears anything apart that gets too close, and the fragments become part of the ring system. 2. Fragmentation of moons: moons of Saturn collide with each other and other bolides and break up, the fragments of which form Saturn's rings. 3. Accretionary remnant: rings are formed from primordial debris that was not accreted to form Saturn initially.
what is Saturn's moon Titan's rotational period
There are no known black holes near Saturn. The nearest known black holes are much further away in our galaxy. Saturn does have its own moons and rings, but black holes are not typically found in such close proximity to planets.
Saturn is a planet in our solar system, so Saturn's galaxy is the earth's galaxy, and so forth. Saturn's galaxy (our galaxy) is the Milky Way. The Milky Way is a spiral [shaped] galaxy.
Yes. Saturn is part of our solar system. It will never leave the galaxy.
NO. Saturn is one of the eight planets.
Well considering a galaxy can be light years across, a galaxy, no matter what type is far larger than Saturn. Jupiter is bigger than Saturn, so too is the Sun.
The Milky Way Galaxy.
A barred spiral galaxy,
Millions of light-years apart.
No. The solar system is part of the galaxy.
the rest of the galaxy :D
Insignificantly different from that of Earth and the Sun.
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.
The stars, apart from our Sun, are much farther away than Saturn.