Uranus as well as Neptune (Neptunes' rings are very hard to detect).
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.
No rings have been observed around Pluto.So far rings have only been observed around Jovian Giant planets, like Saturn. Pluto is a dwarf planet, not a Jovian planet.
No planet has a ring around it. What appears to be rings are lots of small particles orbiting the planet and the number of "rings" depends on how finely they are viewed. All four outer planets, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune have rings. Each ring has patches that are more or less dense: these may be considered as ringlets or rings in their own right. It is not possible, therefore, to arrive at a sensible count of rings.
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.
There are no rings around the earth so they do nothing.
Saturn
no
The large gaseous planet with the famous rings around it is Saturn. Its rings are composed of ice particles and debris, making it a unique and stunning feature of the planet.
Saturn has the brightest 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 rings around planets are called planetary rings. They are made up of countless small particles, ranging in size from micrometers to meters, that orbit around the planet due to gravitational forces.
The planet between Earth and the Sun with a ring around it is called Venus. Although Venus does not have traditional rings like Saturn, it does have a thin ring of dust particles encircling the planet.