Yes, Jupiter has all of these.
Mercury has volcanoes and craters like the moon, but no rings, only the gas giants have rings, and Mercury has no moon.
Jupiter is made entirely of gas.
Mars doesn't have rings. The giant planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune) do have rings.
By every measuer (diameter, volume, mass, etc.) Jupiter is bigger than Mars. After all, Jupiter is the largest planet in the Solar System.
Yes, on certain expeditions to Venus in the past several decades, evidence has been found proving that there has been volcanic activity on the planet. However, there are several large dormant volcanoes on the surface, so future volcanic activity can be expected.
Io, Jupiter's moon has active volcanoes of lava from magma caused due to tidal forces from Jupiter and large moons like Ganymede and Callisto. Triton, a moon of Neptune, and Enceladus, a moon of Saturn both are active with Cryrovolcanoes. These are volcanoes that give off water vapor, methane, ethane, ammonia, etc.
Neptune has 5 rings and 13 moons. Large spots regularly appear then disappear in the atmosphere. These are anticyclonic storms. Neptune does not have any volcanoes, deserts or other landforms. Neptune is a gas giant, meaning it has no surface. With no surface, volcanoes, deserts, oceans, mountains and other landforms cannot form.
The moon's craters are impact craters, formed by collisions of interplanetary debris (asteroids, comets, etc.) with the surface of the moon.
Some physical features on the moon are craters, lava plains, etc. Some physical features on the moon are craters, lava plains, etc. Some physical features on the moon are craters, lava plains, etc.
There are a few similarities between Saturn and Jupiter. For instance, they both have rings around them. The rings are made up of ice and rock. Another similarity is that they are both gas planets.
Craters are eroded away by weather, earthquakes, living things, etc.
The vast majority of lunar craters are caused by meteor impacts.