Use your imagination. Yes, this is the asker speaking. There are actual things like this you know.
Planetary rings are made of dust, moonlets, or other orbiting objects. Saturn, Jupiter, Uranus, and Neptune all have ring systems.
No. Saturn's rings are made up off bits of rock, ice and other objects that are pulled into orbit and have stuck and partially stuck together.
The collections of orbiting solar objects are not considered "rings", but "belts" of objects sych as the Asteroid Belt, Kuiper Belt, and the Oort Cloud of comets.The Sun does not have rings.
In my opinion it's quite simply Blind Guardian, Demons and Wizards never wrote the Lord of the Rings or the Bards song.
The Earth has had rings in the recent past but none stable enough to be comparable to the other planets in the solar system. These rings were formed by capturing comets and other objects but due to Earth's large atmosphere for its relative size, these rings have been degraded rather quickly. Read this: http://www.science-frontiers.com/sf076/sf076a05.htm
no you are not able to stand on Saturn's rings because they are made up of asteroids and other objects unless you were standing on an asteroid
A lot of common objects made from topaz is different types of jewelry such as necklaces and rings.
Saturn's rings are made up of many small objects, rock and ice, that are in orbit around Saturn. Because all the object move, the rings can be said to move.
Jeanine Payer is a specialty jewelery store. They have a wide selection of necklaces, rings, bracelets and other stylish objects for both men and women.
annual rings
Family rings are different from other kinds of rings because they have sentimental value. Family rings are usually passed down from person to person and stay within that particular family, other rings can be bought and do not have as much meaning behind them.
The objects in Saturn's rings don't qualify as asteroids. They're just floating pieces of rock and ice pulled in by Saturn's gravity.