Image credit: Scientific Mystery
Have you ever thought about what might happen if you or an astronaut accidentally drifted into Saturn's atmosphere?
Watch this video to understand the results of your great (and final) fall:
YouTube video by V101 Science
It would not be a pleasant free fall into Saturn's atmosphere when you consider the following:
"Winds in the upper atmosphere reach 1,600 feet per second (500 meters per second) in the equatorial region. In contrast, the strongest hurricane-force winds on Earth top out at about 360 feet per second (110 meters per second). And the pressure—the same kind you feel when you dive deep underwater—is so powerful it squeezes gas into liquid.
Saturn's north pole has an interesting atmospheric feature—a six-sided jet stream. This hexagon-shaped pattern was first noticed in images from the Voyager I spacecraft and has been more closely observed by the Cassini spacecraft since. Spanning about 20,000 miles (30,000 kilometers) across, the hexagon is a wavy jet stream of 200-mile-per-hour winds (about 322 kilometers per hour) with a massive, rotating storm at the center. There is no weather feature like it anywhere else in the solar system."
After all the intense, chilly wind and encountering air pressure 2 to 4 times more intense than Earth's, you would then enter the surface which isn't actually a surface. The outcome would not be very pleasant whether you were in a spacesuit, or even in a spacecraft:
"As a gas giant, Saturn doesn’t have a true surface. The planet is mostly swirling gases and liquids deeper down. While a spacecraft would have nowhere to land on Saturn, it wouldn’t be able to fly through unscathed either. The extreme pressures and temperatures deep inside the planet crush, melt and vaporize spacecraft trying to fly into the planet."
The pressures and temperatures you'd encounter would obliterate you, no doubt. My advice is to never attempt to free fall on Saturn. :) It would be a much better trip if you simply orbited Saturn to view its rings, its gaseous horizon, and its aurorae.
References
https://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/saturn/in-depth/
https://www.labroots.com/trending/videos/11162/here-s-what-would-happen-if-you-fell-into-saturn-s-atmosphere
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TGaW-c7T4f8 (URL to the above video)