No. The rings are composed of ice and rock particles which orbit the planet. If in a area of the rings, if it was compact enough it would be could put a Land Rover on it.
that is extremely awesome
Ice and celesial rock
from the size of a refrigerator to a grain of sand
They keep Saturn's rings in order.
Only in space. A spaceship on land is called a landship and a spaceship in the ocean is, ironically, misnomered a seaship.
Around Saturns equatorial diameter, as has to be the case
no
jupiters rings are bigger than Saturns.
got fat
A planetary ring
When the Voyager passed by.
7
that is extremely awesome
They are not regenerated. The rings are generated by the gravity of the planet and the inertia of the object.
Saturn's rings seem to disappear when we view them edge-on. The rings are so thin that at our distance we cannot see them at this angle.
Saturn's rings go 30,000 miles per hour.
A long time ago