Is Saturn's average radius about nine times larger than Earth's?
NoParrot Fact Check · May 20, 2026
NoParrot Score
Mostly consistent
Claim breakdown
- Verified
- 1
- Uncertain
- 1
- Disputed
- 0
Synthesis
Saturn's average radius is approximately 9.14 times larger than Earth's. This is supported by multiple models indicating a ratio of about 9.1 to 9.14 times larger.
Earth's mean radius is cited as approximately 6,371 km by several models. Saturn's average radius is stated to be around 58,232 km by some models, although this specific figure for Saturn's radius is disputed by one model.
What each model said
- Gemini ✓ All verified
Yes, Saturn's average radius is approximately 9.14 times larger than Earth's.
- Claude ✓ 1 ✗ 1
Yes, approximately. Saturn's average radius is about 58,232 km, compared to Earth's 6,371 km — a ratio of roughly 9.1 times larger.
- GPT ✓ 1 ✗ 1
Yes. Saturn’s average radius is about **58,232 km**, while Earth’s is about **6,371 km**. That makes Saturn’s average radius roughly: **58,232 ÷ 6,371 ≈ 9.1** So Saturn’s average radius is about **nine times larger than Earth’s**.
- Grok ✓ 1 ⚠ 1
Yes. Saturn's mean radius is 58,232 km compared to Earth's 6,371 km, a ratio of approximately 9.1.
Models Used
- Gemini
- Claude
- GPT
- Grok
Disclaimer: This page summarizes the output of 4 frontier large-language models at a single point in time. NoParrot Score reflects cross-model consensus, not absolute truth. Models can be wrong, and consensus can be wrong with them. Treat this page as a research aid, not a final verdict.
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