No. Saturn has rings, but it is no way owes its existence to them. It is uncertain how the rings formed, but they may be what is left of a moon that was destroyed.
Either a Saturn 's moon got destroyed into pieces by a celestial body, or maybe some celestial bodies went within Saturn's roche limit which burst them into pieces too.
The rings of Saturn (mostly water ice) are thought to have been formed from one or more moons. Whether they were destroyed by collisions or by the planet's gravity is still unknown.
Probably Saturn will live, but is will be thrown out of its orbit. look at "Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9" you may find it interesting.
Venus does not have rings
If the Saturn V was available it could launch larger heavier payloads than the Ariane 4. However at the end of the Apollo program all tooling for making Saturn Vs and any spare parts were destroyed. You would have to do so much work to start making more Saturn V rockets now that it would be easier and more efficient to just start entirely from scratch and design a new rocket with similar lift capability to the Saturn V.
The rings of Saturn orbits Saturn
{| |+ Saturn |}
I think the blue prints for the Saturn V are on Micro Film. Some of the other stuff is also still on Micro film, but other stuff has been lost or destroyed.
Saturn is spelled Saturn.
The planet that has a moon named Titan is Saturn.
Saturn is a girl