Scientists suggest Titan formed from a giant moon collision that also may explain Saturn’s rings and strange moon orbits.
In 2004, NASA scientists proposed that Enceladus, a small frozen moon orbiting Saturn, could hide a global ocean under its ...
Saturn and the moon will appear close together in the night sky on Friday, January 23. This celestial event, known as a conjunction, occurs when two astronomical bodies seem near each other from Earth ...
When General Motors called Saturn "a different kind of car company," the conglomerate wasn't joking. Saturn operated differently within GM's umbrella, even transforming the car-buying experience by ...
Over the years, passing spacecraft have observed mystifying weather patterns at the poles of Jupiter and Saturn. The two planets host very different types of polar vortices, which are huge atmospheric ...
Saturn and the moon will appear close together in the night sky in an event known as a conjunction. The celestial event will be visible for one night on Friday, Jan. 23, 2026, after sunset. Viewers in ...
A rare combination of Earth- and space-based observations has revealed the true mass and location of a rogue planet drifting through the galaxy. The Saturn-sized world likely formed around a star ...
Recent re-examination of Cassini spacecraft data has revised the understanding of Saturn’s largest moon, Titan, suggesting that it may not possess a global subsurface ocean as previously believed, ...
Saturn’s moon Titan may not be hiding the vast underground ocean scientists once envisioned. A fresh look at Cassini’s radio-tracking data reveals that the moon is losing roughly 3 to 4 terawatts of ...
Saturn’s largest moon Titan has been thought to have a large ocean below its surface. This discovery was made in 2008 by the Cassini mission. However, the Jet Propulsion Lab as been analyzing that ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. An award-winning reporter writing about stargazing and the night sky. Saturn’s largest moon, Titan, which since 2008 thought to ...