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Saturn
[ sat-ern ]
noun
- an ancient Roman god of agriculture, the consort of Ops, believed to have ruled the earth during an age of happiness and virtue, identified with the Greek god Cronus.
- Astronomy. the planet sixth in order from the sun, having an equatorial diameter of 74,600 miles (120,000 kilometers), a mean distance from the sun of 886.7 million miles (1427 million kilometers), a period of revolution of 29.46 years, and 21 known moons. It is the second largest planet in the solar system, encompassed by a series of thin, flat rings composed of small particles of ice.
- Alchemy. the metal lead.
- a U.S. space-vehicle booster developing from 2 million to 9 million pounds (900,000 to 4 million kilograms) of thrust for launching satellites, probes, and spaceships.
Saturn
1/ ˈæɜː /
noun
- the Roman god of agriculture and vegetation Greek counterpartCronus
Saturn
2/ ˈæɜː /
noun
- one of the giant planets , the sixth planet from the sun, around which revolve planar concentric rings ( Saturn's rings ) consisting of small frozen particles. The planet has 62 satellites. Mean distance from sun: 1425 million km; period of revolution around sun: 29.41 years; period of axial rotation: 10.23 hours; equatorial diameter and mass: 9.26 and 95.3 times that of the earth, respectively See also Titan 2
- a large US rocket used for launching various objects, such as a spaceprobe or an Apollo spacecraft, into space
- the alchemical name for lead 2
Saturn
/ ă′ə /
- The sixth planet from the Sun and the second largest, with a diameter about ten times that of Earth. Saturn is a gas giant that is almost as large as Jupiter in diameter but with only about 30 percent of Jupiter's mass. Its mainly gaseous composition together with its rapid axial rotation (it rotates once every 10.7 hours) cause a noticeable flattening at the poles and a prominent equatorial bulge. Saturn is encircled by a large, flat system of rings made up of rock fragments and tiny ice crystals, first observed by Galileo in 1610. The rings are believed to be unstable and therefore likely of recent origin; they may have been formed from bodies such as asteroids or moons that were shattered as they approached closer than the Roche limit . Saturn has numerous moons, of which the largest is Titan, the second largest moon in the solar system after Jupiter's Ganymede and larger than both Mercury and Pluto.
- See Table at solar system
Saturn
1- In astronomy , the second-largest major planet , sixth from the sun. Saturn was named for the Roman god of agriculture. Like Jupiter , Saturn is composed largely of gas es and liquids . Saturn is the most distant planet plainly visible to the naked eye. ( See solar system ; see under “Mythology and Folklore.” )
Notes
Example Sentences
Jan. 6, 2025An earlier version of this story said the Saturn Awards will take place Feb. 5.
About five planets may be visible without a telescope: Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn, according to NASA.
Skywatchers are in for a treat this week as seven planets - Mars, Jupiter, Uranus, Venus, Neptune, Mercury, and Saturn will all be briefly visible in the evening sky.
They include Venus, Jupiter and Saturn, easily visible to the naked eye as bright white points of light - and Mars as an orange dot.
That is why astrobiologists are increasingly turning their eyes toward icy bodies like the Jovian moons of Europa and Ganymede, Saturn’s moons Titan and Enceladus, Uranus' moon Miranda and the dwarf planet Ceres.
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