All of the Gas Giants have rings, even Jupiter. Except for Saturn, they are very thin and, well not small but comparitivley small in reference to the planet.
Uranus is the planet out of the Jovian planets that does not have rings.
It may seem that only Saturn has rings, but all of the Jovian planets have rings. Some are faint rings around the planet. Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune all have rings.
The largest planet with rings is Jupiter, although they are barley visible, all out planets have a ring system. Saturn is the second largest planet with rings.
No, all the moons and rings rotate in the same plane as the planet itself.
Saturn is not the only planet with rings, but it has the most prominent and well-known ring system. The rings are made up of ice, dust, and rock particles in orbit around the planet. Saturn's rings are believed to have formed from the debris of a moon or comet that was shattered by the planet's gravity or a passing asteroid.
Saturn is the outer planet that has rings. Its rings are composed of ice, rock, and dust particles ranging in size from small grains to boulders.
Mercury, Venus, Mars and Earth has no rings. All the inner planets don't. Although Pluto is a planet, it is too small to be considered a planet so it is a dwarf planet. But Pluto also have no rings.
Mercury, Venus, Mars and Earth has no rings. All the inner planets don't. Although Pluto is a planet, it is too small to be considered a planet so it is a dwarf planet. But Pluto also have no rings.
Saturn is the best-known giant planet with rings.
Saturn has magnificent and beautiful rings, but it is likely that all "gas giant" planets will have at least partial rings.
Perhaps this question is about "rings"? Saturn is known as the ringed planet, but Jupiter, Uranus and Neptune all have smaller rings.
Uranus has 13 known rings and 27 known moons, or satellites, making it the planet with the most rings out of all the planets in our solar system.