The gravity on Saturn is only 1.08 times the gravity on Earth, so you would only weigh a bit more if you were on Saturn's "surface" (it is a gas giant afterall, so you'd have to be in some sort of dirigible.
However if you went diving in the gaseous and liquid seas of Saturn it could get interesting. About halfway to the core the pressure is roughly two megabars and the temperature is about 6,000 K. These pressures compress even hydrogen into liquid metallic hydrogen. You would be in poor shape.
No. While Saturn probably has a solid core, the heat and pressure there are enormous. A person placed there would be crushed and incinerated in an instant.
Saturn is a gas giant primarily composed of hydrogen and helium with trace amounts of other gases like methane. It is not possible to smell the gas on Saturn because the planet's atmosphere is not breathable for humans and lacks the necessary molecules to trigger the sense of smell.
Because the atmosphere of Saturn is too violent, with winds raging at above 1000mph. The Spacecraft will also be crushed if it travels beyond Saturn's atmosphere as the pressure is too great for the spacecraft to sustain.
We would freeze to death We would also sink and probably choke. There's more, though. We would also be crushed by Saturn's pressure, but if we did get far enough, we would probably melt once we reached the core.
well of course not. Saturn is the second largest planet so the gravitational pull will be too much even on Jupiter has the most gravity so u'd be much more heavier on Jupiter, Saturn, uranus and neptune
Saturn is made up of crushed up comets (dusty, dirty snowballs), crushed up asteroids (big rocks), and various gases such as hydrogen and helium. Mainly gases and crushed asteroids though.FUN SATURN FACT OF THE DAY: If there was an ocean big enough to hold it, Saturn would float.
You would not have to worry about either. You would be crushed to death by the gravity in Saturn before you could worry about the heat or the cold.
Yes, someone would be both incinerated and crushed on Saturn. The pressure due to mass is so intense that Saturn's surface is liquid, despite being made of what would normally be gaseous.
No. While Saturn probably has a solid core, the heat and pressure there are enormous. A person placed there would be crushed and incinerated in an instant.
No, the gravity is so high that a person would be immediately crushed by his/her own weight.
The Saturn V rocket stood 363 feet (111 meters) tall at launch.
The Saturn V rockets used by NASA during the Apollo missions stood at a height of 363 feet (111 meters).
First of all Saturn is made almost completely from gas, and may not even have a surface. If it had a surface the atmosphere would be too thick to see anything. If you were to look towards the Earth while orbiting Saturn, you would see a small blue dot.
The Saturn V rocket stood at about 363 feet (111 meters) tall.
There have never been, nor will there ever be, Astronauts who land on Saturn. The gravity is too great, the air pressures are too high and the atmosphere is toxic to human life. A human would be crushed by his/her own weight given the gravity on Saturn. A human could not tolerate the atmospheric pressures on Saturn. A human could not endure the gasses in Saturn's atmosphere.
not likely... i doubt we would survive on most planets because of temperatures and weathers. like on Jupiter we would be pulled in hard and fast then most likely be crushed into the ground :D
Saturn is a gas giant primarily composed of hydrogen and helium with trace amounts of other gases like methane. It is not possible to smell the gas on Saturn because the planet's atmosphere is not breathable for humans and lacks the necessary molecules to trigger the sense of smell.