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About the Planets - Science@NASA Our solar system has eight planets, and five dwarf planets - all located in an outer spiral arm of the Milky Way galaxy called the Orion Arm
Saturn: Facts - NASA Science Saturn is the sixth planet from the Sun, and the second-largest planet in our solar system
Saturn - Science@NASA Saturn is the sixth planet from the Sun, and the second largest in the solar system It’s surrounded by beautiful rings
Saturn - NASA Science Saturn and its rings completely fill the field of view of Cassini's narrow angle camera in this image taken on
Solar System Exploration - Science@NASA The solar system has one star, eight planets, five dwarf planets, at least 290 moons, more than 1 3 million asteroids, and about 3,900 comets
Saturn Exploration - NASA Science Cassini studied Saturn from orbit for 13 years before its human engineers on Earth transformed it into an atmospheric probe for its spectacular final plunge
Saturn Moons - Science@NASA Saturn has 274 confirmed moons in its orbit, far more than any other planet in our solar system In March 2025, astronomers confirmed the discovery of 128 small moons around Saturn — adding to the already large moon count Saturn's moons range in size from larger than the planet Mercury – the giant moon Titan – to as small as a sports arena The small moon Enceladus has a global ocean
NASA Science Missions NASA Science Fleet Chart NASA Science missions circle the Earth, the Sun, the Moon, Mars, and many other destinations within our Solar System, including spacecraft that look out even further into our universe The Science Fleet depicts the scope of NASA’s activity and how our missions have permeated throughout the solar system Download the Science Fleet Chart
Rings - NASA Science Saturn Rings: Overview Scientists had never before studied the size, temperature, composition and distribution of Saturn’s rings from Saturn orbit Cassini captured extraordinary ring-moon interactions, observed the lowest ring-temperature ever recorded at Saturn, discovered that the moon Enceladus is the source for Saturn’s E ring, and viewed the rings at equinox when sunlight strikes the