The gravitational pull of the planet Saturn keep it's rings in orbit.
The rings that it has and the moons that orbit around it.
No. The rings of Saturn are not solid disks. They are belts of rocky and icy debris in orbit around the planet.
No, Saturns rings are made up of billions of bodies of ice, ranging from millimetres to metres in diameter, in orbit around the planet.
Can an object stay in orbit around Saturn somewhere else besides the rings
because it moves every time you see it it orbits
The rings of Saturn do not float. The rings consists of pices of rock and ices. Each fragment is on orbit around Saturn. An object in orbit does not float. Rather, it is in continuous freefall, but is moving so fast "sideways" that it constantly misses.
Around Saturns equatorial diameter, as has to be the case
Saturns ring are rocks and meteors spinning around Saturn
no
jupiters rings are bigger than Saturns.
got fat
A planetary ring