Saturn's temperature is believed to be about -270 degrees Fahrenheit or -167 degrees Celsius, which is cold. It's so cold because its so far away from the sun. The hottest planets are the inner planets which consists of Mercury and Venus. Earth is in the Goldilocks zone witch is where it is not too hot and not too cold but the right temperature for life. Anything further away from the sun than the Earth is, is way below 0 degrees Celsius as mars is -250 degrees Celsius.
The moon titan belongs to the planet, Saturn
The planet that takes twenty nine earth years to orbit the sun is Saturn.
Saturn is a gas giant and does not have a solid surface, so it doesn't have a "high temperature" like rocky planets. However, it has a hot upper atmosphere with temperatures around -150 degrees Celsius.
Saturn is not a bad planet in the moral sense of good and bad, there are good law abiding people and bad criminals. However, Saturn a gas giant is not a livable planet. The gravitational pull is much too strong, Saturn has very cold, very poisonous gas. There is no way a human being could live on Saturn, although, we might be able to live on one of it's moons/satellites. It depends on what you mean by the word bad. Saturn is a planet and not good or evil. However, no human being could ever live on the planet Saturn, so in that sense of the word; Saturn is a bad, terrible place for humans to try and live.
Saturn is a gas giant composed mostly of hydrogen and helium. It has a massive ring system made up of ice and rock particles. Temperatures on Saturn can drop to extremely low levels, reaching as cold as -288 degrees Fahrenheit (-178 degrees Celsius).
SATURN IS 10000000000000000000000C HOT
Saturn is -270 degrees or higher or less
because saturn has cold and hot temparatures which causes st=aturns surface to be really hot
64,000,000,000
Saturn has a chilly climate because the distance from the sun
11,750 c
very hot
Saturn is -270 degrees or higher or less
184 C
well i think it is cold and hot
Saturn is so hot, it lets out gas very often. It has rings, rings, rings
The Cassini spacecraft, a joint mission between NASA, the European Space Agency, and the Italian Space Agency, discovered the "hot spots" on Saturn. Cassini arrived at Saturn in 2004 and observed these hot spots on the gas giant's southern pole.