Saturn, the 6th planet from the Sun, is called as the Roman god of agriculture. In Greek mythology, Saturn became the ruler of the universe of discourse when he led a prosperous rebellion against his father, Uranus.
Mankinds fascination with Saturn started in 1610, when Galileo Galilei directed his crude telescope towards the most upstage of the known planets. He knew that he was watching something very different only his meager 20X telescope could not picture him a very clearer image.
Galileo never did realize that Saturn consisted of rings. His best drawings portrayed a sphere with handles, somewhat like a sugar bowl. Saturn's form lies completely away from human experience. There merely is no earthy example of a world rounded by unconnected rings.
Nowadays, even the cheapest department-store telescope easily shows Saturn's glorious rings. The only image-spoiling disturbance is the regular turbulence of Earth's atmosphere. If you come across "poor seeing," wait for a nighttime while stars aren't twinkling and global figures are steady.
Saturn's celestial orbit:
The circular planet's meandering is inevitable and simple.
Every year, since Earth circles around the Sun, we pass a month or 2 close to Saturn—always at one time while the three physical structure* form a straight line, with our Earth sandwiched in the center, in a configuration called opposition. Then we go on, whirl around the Sun once again, and again approach Saturn. Saturn, still, is a very slow-moving planet. In its own twenty-nine 1/2-year orbit, Saturn edges ahead ever so slenderly, in order that our rendezvous happens about 2 weeks later every year.
A lot of amusing facts about Saturn:
Saturn is the second-largest planet in our solar system. More than 9 Earths would accommodate across Saturn. Saturn is blistering on the inside but frigid on the outside. Its center temperature is about 21,150°F. The average temperature on Saturn comprises of -280°F. Air current flows up to 11,000 mph on Saturn.
Moonstruck? Saturn has 56 moons around (and counting!). Titan is Saturn's biggest moon.
Saturn is generally gas and the least thick from all the planets. If you could imerge Saturn into a huge swimming pool, it would float. The unconnected rings of Saturn are composed of millions of bits of ice, dust, and stone ranging in size from as small as a grain of common salt to as big as a mansion.Saturn has been visited by a lot of probes. In 2004, declared a four-year mission to research the planet, its rings, and its moons around.