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Saturn
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Saturn

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The rings of Saturn, consisting of small pieces of ice and rock, are 62,000 km/38,000 mi wide and just 100 m/300 ft thick.
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Voyager 2 captured the images used to build this evocative picture of Saturn and three of its moons, from a distance of 21 million km/13 million mi. Furthest from the planet is Rhea, followed by Dione, and Tethys, which casts a shadow on Saturn's southern hemisphere.
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The rings of Saturn taken by the Voyager 2 probe on 23 August 1981. Voyager 2 was 2.7 million km/1.7 million mi from the planet at the time. More than 60 bright and dark ringlets are shown here.

Sixth planet from the Sun, and the second-largest in the Solar System, encircled by bright and easily visible equatorial rings. Viewed through a telescope it is ochre. Its polar diameter is 12,000 km/7,450 mi smaller than its equatorial diameter, a result of its fast rotation and low density, the lowest of any planet. Its mass is 95 times that of the Earth and its magnetic field 1,000 times stronger.

Mean distance from the Sun

1.427 billion km/0.886 billion mi

Equatorial diameter

120,000 km/75,000 mi

Rotational period

10 hours 14 minutes at equator, 10 hours 40 minutes at higher latitudes

Year

29.46 Earth years

Atmosphere

visible surface consists of swirling clouds, probably made of frozen ammonia at a temperature of −170°C/−274°F, although the markings in the clouds are not as prominent as Jupiter's. The Voyager probes, visiting in 1980 and 1981, found winds reaching 1,800 kph/1,100 mph

Surface

Saturn is believed to have a small core of rock and iron, encased in ice and topped by a deep layer of liquid hydrogen

Satellites

as of 2005, 49 moons were known, more than for any other planet. The largest moon, Titan, has a dense atmosphere

Rings

the rings visible from Earth begin about 14,000 km/9,000 mi from the planet's cloudtops and extend out to about 76,000 km/47,000 mi. Made of small chunks of ice and rock (averaging 1 m/3.3 ft across), they are 275,000 km/170,000 mi rim to rim, but only 100 m/300 ft thick. The Voyager probes showed that the rings actually consist of thousands of closely spaced ringlets, looking like the grooves in a gramophone record. In 2004 a new ring around Saturn was reported by astronomers. They detected a 300-km/186-mi-wide dust ring located 1,200 km/746 mi beyond the main ring system of Saturn, between the A and the F rings.

From Earth, Saturn's rings appear to be divided into three main sections. Ring A, the outermost, is separated from ring B, the brightest, by the Cassini division, named after its discoverer Italian astronomer Giovanni Cassini, which is 3,000 km/2,000 mi wide; the inner, transparent ring C is called the Crepe Ring. Each ringlet of the rings is made of a swarm of icy particles like snowballs, a few fractions of an inch to a few yards in diameter.

Outside the A ring is the narrow and faint F ring, which the Voyagers showed to be twisted or braided. The rings of Saturn could be the remains of a shattered moon, or they may always have existed in their present form.

The Cassini-Huygens space probe, developed jointly by NASA and the European Space Agency, was launched in October 1997 and went into orbit around Saturn in 2004. In December of that year the lander Huygens descended to the surface of Titan. Cassini will continue to explore the Saturnian system until at least 2008.

The latest discoveries of Saturnian satellites were made during 2005. Astronomers using the Subaru telescope on Mauna Kea, Hawaii, announced the discovery of 12 satellites. The moons are between 3 and 7 km/1.9 and 4.3 mi in diameter and occupy orbits far out from the planet, completing their orbits only once every two years. Eleven of the moons orbit Saturn in the opposite direction to the planet's larger moons, indicating that they probably have been captured by Saturn's gravitational pull. The Cassini mission announced the discovery of another satellite, orbiting in a gap in an outer ring.

Also in 2005, scientists announced the discovery of an atmosphere surrounding Enceladus, one of Saturn's moons. Measurements from the Cassini space probe showed that a thin water vapour atmosphere surrounds the moon. The atmosphere is too thin to be visible and was detected by scientists using the probes magnetometer to measure variations in Saturn's magnetic field caused by interactions with the moon's atmosphere.

Saturn

In Roman mythology, the god of agriculture, identified by the Romans with the Greek god Kronos. His period of rule was the ancient Golden Age, when he introduced social order and the arts of civilization. Saturn was dethroned by his sons Jupiter, Neptune, and Dis. At the Saturnalia, his festival in December, gifts were exchanged, and slaves were briefly treated as their masters' equals.

In Rome the temple of Saturn stood at the foot of the Capitoline Hill, and contained the Republican treasury. It was an occasional meeting-place of the Senate, and housed a statue of the god whose feet were tied with woollen bands, left unbound during Saturnalia.

Saturn's original partner was Lua, a goddess of destruction, but she gave way to Ops, who was identified with Kronos' wife, the Greek fertility goddess Rhea.



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