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Through a telescope on Earth, you can see the rings of Saturn, which are the most prominent and easily observable. Depending on the telescope's size and quality, you may also discern some details of the rings, such as the Cassini Division, which is a gap between the A and B rings. Other gas giants like Jupiter and Uranus have faint rings that are much harder to see. In summary, Saturn is the only planet with rings that are clearly visible through telescopes from Earth.
Earth does not have any physical rings like Saturn.
so far the Earth has 0 rings.
Not sure there is anything: all the outer planets have rings, the two gas giants have many moons etc.
Not sure there is anything: all the outer planets have rings, the two gas giants have many moons etc.
None. Saturn's rings are not made up of meteorites. See related question below.
No, Neptune's rings are visible, although they are very faint and difficult to observe from Earth. They were discovered in 1989 by the Voyager 2 spacecraft during its flyby of the planet.
Earth's moon does not have any rings, nor moons.
Luna is another name for Earth's Moon. It has no rings.
Earth's moon does not have any rings, nor moons.
if your talking about the ones that Saturn and Jupiter have well then earth has no rings around it