Figure: Moons of Saturn

Source: Wikipedia

Saturn has 60 named natural satellites, many of which were discovered only recently and may be as small as two-to-three kilometers across, plus hundreds of observed "moonlets" only a few tens or hundreds of meters across in the A Ring.

Seven of these moons are large enough to have achieved hydrostatic equilibrium and so would be considered dwarf planets if they were in orbit about the Sun; indeed one of them, Titan, is massive enough to retain an atmosphere denser than our own. There have also been sightings of three objects which may be moons. A precise number of moons can not be given, as there is no objective boundary between the countless small anonymous objects that form Saturn's ring system and the larger objects that have been named as moons.

Credit: Francesco Ruspoli and NASA (this image was created by Francesco Ruspoli using public domain NASA pictures. The Moons are roughly to scale. Though in the right order, the distances between each moon is NOT to scale.)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saturn's_natural_satellites