Astronomy facts
THE PLANET SATURN- OUR SECOND GIANT IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM
Saturn is the sixth planet from the sun and the second
largest planet in the solar system. Saturn was the Roman name for Cronus, the
lord of the Titans in Greek mythology. Saturn is the root of the English word
"Saturday."
Saturn is the farthest planet from Earth visible to the
naked human eye, but it is through a telescope that the planet's most
outstanding features can be seen: Saturn's rings.
Physical characteristics of Saturn
Physical characteristics of Saturn
Saturn is a gas giant made up mostly of hydrogen and helium. Saturn is big enough to
hold more than 760 Earths, and is more massive than any other planet except
Jupiter, roughly 95 times Earth's mass. The yellow and
gold bands seen in Saturn's
atmosphere are the result of super-fast winds in the upper atmosphere,
which can reach up to 1,100 mph (1,800 km/h) around its equator, combined with
heat rising from the planet's interior.
Saturn spins faster than any other planet except Jupiter,
completing a rotation roughly every 10-and-a-half hours. This rapid spinning
causes Saturn to bulge at its equator and flatten at its poles — the planet is
8,000 miles (13,000 kilometers) wider at its equator than between the poles.
Saturn's most recent curiosity may be the giant hexagon circling its north pole, with each of its sides nearly 7,500 miles (12,500 km) across — big enough to fit nearly four Earths inside. Thermal images show it reaches some 60 miles (100 km) down into the planet's atmosphere. It remains uncertain what causes it.
Saturn's most recent curiosity may be the giant hexagon circling its north pole, with each of its sides nearly 7,500 miles (12,500 km) across — big enough to fit nearly four Earths inside. Thermal images show it reaches some 60 miles (100 km) down into the planet's atmosphere. It remains uncertain what causes it.
Other titanic storms appear in Saturn’s atmosphere once
every Saturn year (approximately 30 Earth-years), disrupting the temperature
and winds of the planet’s skies. Six such storms have been observed on the
planet since 1876, but in 2011, NASA’s Cassini spacecraft became the first
orbiter to observe one. Like
other giant planets, Saturn also has northern and southern lights, caused by
particles from the sun.
Composition
& structure: Atmospheric composition (by volume): 96.3 percent molecular hydrogen, 3.25
percent helium, minor amounts of methane, ammonia, hydrogen deuteride, ethane,
ammonia ice aerosols, water ice aerosols, ammonia hydrosulfide aerosols.
Magnetic field: Saturn has a magnetic field about 578 times more powerful than Earth's.
Chemical composition: Saturn seems to have a hot solid inner core of iron and rocky material surrounded by an outer core probably composed of ammonia, methane, and water. Next is a layer of highly compressed, liquid metallic hydrogen, followed by a region of viscous hydrogen and helium. This hydrogen and helium becomes gaseous near the planet's surface and merges with its atmosphere.
Magnetic field: Saturn has a magnetic field about 578 times more powerful than Earth's.
Chemical composition: Saturn seems to have a hot solid inner core of iron and rocky material surrounded by an outer core probably composed of ammonia, methane, and water. Next is a layer of highly compressed, liquid metallic hydrogen, followed by a region of viscous hydrogen and helium. This hydrogen and helium becomes gaseous near the planet's surface and merges with its atmosphere.
Internal structure: Saturn seems to have a core between about 10 to 20 times
as massive as Earth.
Orbit & rotation: Average distance from the sun: 885,904,700 miles (1,426,725,400 km). By comparison: 9.53707 times that of Earth. Perihelion (closest approach to sun): 838,519,000 miles (1,349,467,000 km). By comparison: 9.177 times that of Earth. Aphelion (farthest distance from sun): 934,530,000 miles (1,503,983,000 km). By comparison: 9.886 times that of Earth.
Orbit & rotation: Average distance from the sun: 885,904,700 miles (1,426,725,400 km). By comparison: 9.53707 times that of Earth. Perihelion (closest approach to sun): 838,519,000 miles (1,349,467,000 km). By comparison: 9.177 times that of Earth. Aphelion (farthest distance from sun): 934,530,000 miles (1,503,983,000 km). By comparison: 9.886 times that of Earth.
Saturn's
moons
Saturn
has at least 62 moons. Since the
planet was named after Cronus, lord of the Titans in Greek mythology, most of
Saturn's moons are named after other Titans, their descendants, as well as
after giants from Gallic, Inuit and Norse myths.
Saturn's
largest moon, Titan, is slightly larger than Mercury, and is the
second-largest moon in the solar system behind Jupiter's moon Ganymede. (Earth's moon is the fifth largest.) Titan is veiled under a very
thick, nitrogen-rich atmosphere that might be like what Earth's was long ago,
before life. While the Earth's atmosphere extends only about 37 miles (60 km)
into space, Titan's reaches nearly 10 times as far. The atmosphere contains a
number of hydrocarbons, chemicals that primarily make up fossil fuels on Earth.
Methane rain falls from the sky and moves through the moon’s icy crust. A recent
study detected propylene, a chemical used to make plastics, in the planet’s
atmosphere.
These
moons can possess bizarre features. Pan and Atlas are shaped like flying
saucers, Iapetus has one side as bright as snow and one side as dark as
coal. Enceladus shows evidence of "ice volcanism," spewing out
water and other chemicals from the 101 geysers spotted at the moon’s southern pole. A number of these
satellites, such as Prometheus and Pandora, are shepherd moons, interacting
with ring material to keep rings in their orbits.
Though
scientists have identified many moons, the chaotic system has other small moons
constantly being created and destroyed.
Saturn's gravitational impact on the solar system
Saturn's gravitational impact on the solar system
As
the most massive planet in the solar system after Jupiter, the pull of Saturn's
gravity has helped shape the fate of our system. It may have helped violently hurl Neptune and
Uranus outward. It, along with Jupiter, might also have slung a barrage of debris toward the inner planets early in the system's history.
Research
& exploration
The
first spacecraft to reach Saturn was Pioneer 11 in 1979, flying within 13,700 miles (22,000 km) of it,
which discovered the planet's two of its outer rings as well as the presence of
a strong magnetic field. The Voyager spacecraft discovered the planet's rings are made up of ringlets,
and sent back data that led to the discovery or confirmation of the existence
of nine moons.
The Cassini spacecraft now in orbit around Saturn is the largest interplanetary
spacecraft ever built, a two-story-tall probe that, at 6 tons in weight (5,650
kilograms), is roughly equal in mass to an empty 30-passenger school bus. It
discovered plumes on the icy moon Enceladus, and carried the Huygens probe,
which plunged through Titan's atmosphere to successfully land on its surface.
After a decade of observation, Cassini has returned incredible data about the
planet and its moons, as well as a photo recreating the original “Pale Blue Dot” image, which
captures Earth from behind Saturn, in 2013.

Comments