Saturn’s rings will be impossible to see from Earth as of March 23rd, according to Forbes. This is because our view of the ...
Saturn gained a whopping 128 new official moons , as the International Astronomical Union recognised discoveries from a team ...
It’s not that Saturn’s rings are actually disappearing altogether (though that will happen in about 100 million years, ...
The objects around the ringed planet are tiny, but some of them may have formed relatively recently in the solar system’s ...
There were theories, however, that Saturn’s rings were transient and could disappear within 50-to-200 million years, while ...
The smashups are thought to have occurred at least 100 million years ago, but the moons they created are new to astronomers.
A huge haul of 128 newfound satellites might be a hint of past collisions in the planet’s orbit, or something else.
A theory involving a "mushy zone" of ice along the moon’s fissures could explain the enormous plumes erupting from its south ...
Saturn, the sixth planet from the sun, is a gas giant known for its prominent ring system, composed of ice particles, and is the second-largest planet in our solar system, after Jupiter. Saturn is ...