It is also known that it is the second biggest planet in our Solar System.
Can an object stay in orbit around Saturn somewhere else besides the rings
Everything in the Solar System is star dust in the sense that it came from the interiors of stars that aged and died before our sun formed. However, the rings of Saturn are chunks of rocks and ice, and in that sense are not dust at all.
No, I believe that the Earth is. Saturn has rings, which are beautiful, but has little else of interest. Of course, it's entirely possible that we will learn many things about Saturn that would change my mind. So, since I question it, Saturn is NOT "unquestionably" the most interesting planet.
rocks
Since Saturn is a massive gas giant, its gravitational force is stronger than any of the solid rock planets. So it basically pulled fragments from outer space into its gravitational force. All gas planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune) have rings, the other planet's rings are just fainter than Saturn's.
Saturn orbits the Sun like the other planets, it does not orbit anything else. One orbit for Saturn takes 29.4571 Earth years.
A natural satellite is a moon. Saturn has sixty-two known moons, fifty-three of which actually have official names. There are hundreds of smaller objects that make up Saturn's rings. Saturn's moon Titan is larger than the planet Mercury, and is the second largest moon in the solar system.
Chevrolet, Buick, Pontiac, GMC, Saturn, Hummer, Saab, Cadillac what else?
one air as in lord of the rings conquest held by elrond, sorry i do not know the other two but i would think that they are water, and something else.
All else being equal, yes.
feminism
look some where else you bum