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Who said that Saturn does not orbit the earth, the 8 major planets in the solar system, only the king of the sea is not in Saturn's orbital circle. A Saturn year is an Earth year, that is, Saturn orbits the Sun and also orbits Gold. Wood. Water. Fire. Earth and many asteroids in a circle, the required years.
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Saturn's rotation period is 10 hours, 39 minutes = 1 Saturn day = 39,600 seconds.
The Earth's rotation period is about 23 hours, 58 minutes and 49 seconds = 86,329 seconds.
Thus, for a point on Saturn, the time it takes to make one revolution around the Earth's surface is: Saturn day = Earth day = 11 hours and 30 seconds.
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If you really put Saturn next to the Earth, because Saturn has a mass N times that of the Earth, it can only orbit Saturn, and as for how many years, it depends on many factors such as the distance between the two.
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The first thing to tell you about your question is wrong, Saturn orbiting the Earth? Funny! It is recommended that you take a look at geography, which has both the rotation and orbital cycles of Saturn.
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Saturn orbits the Sun. It's the sun.
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How can Saturn orbit the Earth.
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10 hours, 33 minutes, 38 seconds.
Saturn. The rotation is very fast, second only to Jupiter.
The angular velocity of its rotation varies with latitude, with a rotation period of 10 hours and 14 minutes at the equator and 10 hours and 40 minutes at latitude 60°. Due to its rapid rotation, it flattened its shape and is a planet of the solar system.
The flattest one.
In January 2019, scientists based NASA Cassini probe.
Data collected prior to its destruction in September 2017 to study the duration of the Earth's rotation: 10 hours, 33 minutes, and 38 seconds.
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Saturn's rotation period is 10 hours, 33 minutes and 38 seconds (day), and due to Saturn's fast rotation, it also makes its shape flattened, and it is the most flattened of the planets in the space infiltration system of the doutuan ridge. Also, Saturn's orbital period is the day.
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Saturn is composed mainly of hydrogen, with small amounts of helium and trace elements, and its inner core consists of rock and ice, and its outer periphery is surrounded by several layers of metallic hydrogen and gas. When Saturn's winds reach 1,800 km/h, the planet's magnetic field is between Earth and the stronger Jupiter. A total of 82 moons of Saturn have been confirmed, of which Titan is the largest moon in the Saturn system and the second largest in the solar system.
One rotation of Saturn is equal to 10 hours, 33 minutes and 38 seconds,[1] which is about half a day of Earth's duration.
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Saturn's orbital period is the Earth year, with an average distance of about 1,429,400,000 kilometers from the Sun, about astronomical units, and a rotation time of about hours. Jupiter and Saturn are very fast during this time, and the reason for this is that because of their relatively large mass, the gravitational pull is relatively large, and the speed at which the interstellar matter hits the planet is also very fast, causing the speed of the planet's rotation to follow.
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The radius of the Earth's orbit around the Sun is about 1.4 billion kilometers, and its orbit is elliptical. Its distance from the Sun is about 100 million kilometers away at perihelion and aphelion. The average speed of Saturn's rotation around the Sun is about kilometers per second, and it takes about a year to make an revolution.
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Based on data collected by NASA's Cassini probe before it was destroyed in Tanchang in September 2017, scientists studied the length of the planet's rotation at 10 hours, 33 minutes and 38 seconds. Ruler slowly.
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Saturn has a very fast rotation, second only to Jupiter, and its angular rotation speed varies with latitude, with a rotation period of 10 hours and 14 minutes at the equator and 10 hours and 40 minutes at latitude 60°. Due to its rapid rotation of branches, it is flattened in the shape of a macho omen, and it is the most flattened of the planets in the solar ruler system.
In January 2019, scientists studied the length of the Earth's rotation at 10 hours, 33 minutes and 38 seconds, based on data collected by NASA's Cassini probe before it was destroyed in September 2017.
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It depends. Saturn. and the Earth's orbital periodDistances are constantly changing. When the two are on the same side as the Sun, the distance is about 100 million kilometers.
When the two are on different sides of the sun, the distance is 100 million kilometers, and the average distance is 1.5 billion kilometers.
Physical Characteristics:
Due to its low density, high-speed rotation, and fluid variability, Saturn appears as an ellipsoid, or polar axis.
Relatively flat and relatively prominent at the equator, the ratio of its equatorial diameter to the diameter of the poles differs by about 10% (120536 km for the former and 108728 km for the latter). The other gas planets, although also ellipsoids, are less prominent.
Although Saturn's core is much denser than water, it is due to the presence of a thicker atmosphere.
Saturn is still the solar system.
The only planetary cluster that is less dense than the water and land is a specific gravity of g cm?. Saturn is 95 times more massive than Earth, compared to Jupiter.
It is 318 times the mass of Earth, but Jupiter is only about twice the diameter of Saturn. Together, Jupiter and Saturn occupy 92% of the total planetary mass in the solar system.
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Saturn is the 6th planet from the Sun, with an equatorial diameter of 119,300 kilometers, making it the second largest planet in the Tairang Yang system. The 1980-81 Voyager spacecraft mission brought a lot of knowledge about the planet. Saturn's rapid rotation makes its poles noticeably flattened.
Saturn rotates in 10 hours and 39 minutes, and one revolution is an Earth year.
The main component of Saturn's atmosphere is hydrogen, with small amounts of hydrogen and methane. Saturn is the only planet in the solar system that is less dense than water, and if it were thrown into a large enough ocean, it would surely float on the surface. Yellow Saturn has distinct broad stripes on its surface, which are very similar to Jupiter's, but not as distinct as Jupiter's.
The wind speed inside Saturn's atmosphere is extremely high. Near the equator, wind speeds can reach up to 500 meters per second. There are also auroras similar to Earth's at Saturn's north and south poles.
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Saturn is a gas planet, and like all gas planets, it rotates at different latitudes.
The rotation period at the equator is 10 hours and 17 minutes, and at latitude 60 degrees it becomes 10 hours and 40 minutes.
Calculated at Saturn's equator:
Suppose that the time for Saturn's revolution from Min's is also 24 hours of Saturn time – i.e. 24 Saturn hours of Na Zen.
Then 24 Earth Dust Star Hours = Earth Hours.
1 Saturn minute = Earth minute = Earth year.
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No, because the earth has moved in this month, it must have moved too, so its displacement relative to the earth is 0, and it has a displacement relative to the sun. So its position in the universe is changing, but our thinking will be fixed on the earth, so it can be said to be 0. If the field of view is larger, its displacement is not 0
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