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how long does it take saturn to rotate on its axis

Saturn takes about 10.7 hours to rotate once on its axis, so a “day” on Saturn is a little under half an Earth day.

Quick Scoop: Saturn’s Super-Short Day

  • One full spin (one Saturn day): about 10.7 hours.
  • This is one of the shortest days of any planet in the Solar System, second only to Jupiter.
  • Saturn’s fast spin helps make it squashed at the poles and bulgy at the equator (an oblate shape).

A Bit More Detail

Even though Saturn is huge—over nine times Earth’s diameter—its rapid rotation means it whips around very quickly, completing more than two “days” in the time Earth completes one. Because Saturn is a gas giant, different latitudes and its interior can rotate at slightly different rates, which is why scientists sometimes quote slightly different values, but 10.7 hours is the commonly used figure for how long it takes Saturn to rotate on its axis.

TL;DR: Saturn rotates on its axis in about 10.7 hours, giving it an extremely short day compared with Earth.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.