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you could not play the rings of saturn as a record because the rings of saturn are made up of particles of ice so it would technically be impossible to do so. you have to be stupid which u r for searching up this question
Yes, Saturn has a lot of rings. The rings are made up of thousands of small bits of ice or rock. They are so close to Saturn that a normal moon would be broken up there by Saturn's gravity.
That Saturn's density is so low that it would float on water (if a big enough body of water were found).
It would be a complete absence. The Planet Mercury has NO rings, or moons. Only the gas planets have rings: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. Only the rings of Saturn are highly visible.
The rings of Saturn are so distant to be seen from Earth without a telescope?Correct grammar would be either:The rings of Saturn are too distant to be seen from Earth without a telescope.The rings of Saturn are so distant,they cannot be seen from Earth without a telescope.
in a almanac!
Saturn's rings are about 175,000 miles (282,000 km) across, but only about 3,200 feet (1 km) thick. Its rings would just fit in the distance between the Earth and the Moon.
All of the Gas Planets or Outer Planets have a ring system.Jupiter has 3 rings.Saturn has 13 rings with many sub divisions.Uranus has 13 ringsNeptune has 5 rings
There's no free oxygen on Saturn, so yes, you would.
on the rings you could collect rocks and gas substances
A long time ago - when it was first formed - Saturn would have had no rings. The rings formed because the gravity of Saturn attracts small particles of matter to it, and all these particles orbit it in the same plane. They are too small to accrete into a Moon and large enough to hold each other in their rings, without being pulled to the surface of the planet.
No. The rings are composed of ice and rock particles which orbit the planet. If in a area of the rings, if it was compact enough it would be could put a land rover on it.