Saturn's rings probably formed when objects like comets, asteroids or even moons broke up in orbit around Saturn due to Saturn's very strong gravity.
The rocks that created the rings used to be stuck together and was one planet but it became too close to Saturn and saturns gravity distroyed the planet and caused those rings. The gravity of the rock cause the to try and stick together and become one planet again but saturns gravity causes them to split apart again
While the planets were getting into place when the solar system formed, the asteroids that were supposed to be in the asteroid belt when Saturn's gravitational pull tugged them into an orbit.
Astronomers believe that hundreds of years ago, two of Saturn's moons crashed. The moons smashed into millions of pieces.The pieces of the moon are orbiting Saturn forming the rings.
Basically, rings contain matter which is trapped in orbit by a planet's gravity. Saturn's rings are made up of individual chunks of ice, rocks, and dust. When the Voyager space probe flew by Saturn in the early 1980s, it discovered that the rings are an intricate system made up of thousands of thin gaps and ringlets. The rings around Jupiter are very faint. They are composed of smoke-like dust that came off of Jupiter's moons when they were impacted by meteors. The impacts were really hard because of the Jupiter's strong gravitational pull, and they created a lot of dust. They are similar to rings around other planets. Some planets don't have rings (like Earth) because they don't have the same types of debris orbiting them (dust, particles, rocks, ice, etc).
Dust, small rocks, larger rocks and ice. Loads of small pieces in an orbit around the planet.
only the gas giants have rings
Ice and rocks
All inner planets does not have rings around it.
The rings around planets are called rings, or solar rings. Saturn is a planet that is most famous for having rings around it.
Small planets don't have rings because they are land planets and are made out of rocks. Smaller land planets are Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, and dwarf planet, Pluto , Eris. Bigger planets have rings due to their gas. Bigger plants like Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune are made out of different gas particles. You can never land in these planets. So this is the reason why bigger planets have rings.
Four the planets in the solar system have rings. They are the four giant gas planets Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. Saturn, which has by far the largest ring system, was know to have rings for a long time. It was not until the 1970's that rings were discovered around the other gas planets. The rings around Jupiter, Uranus and Neptune are much smaller, darker and fainter than the rings of Saturn.
No, other planets also have rings.
The rings around the planets are made of gas and rubbish as a result of pollution from Earth
All inner planets does not have rings around it.
mars venus Jupiter
The rings around planets are called rings, or solar rings. Saturn is a planet that is most famous for having rings around it.
Most rings are made of ice. Therefore the planets that are father away from the sun are colder than the ones near the sun. Ice will form rings around the planets.
Because It's Made Out of Gas
The rings of Saturn are made of meteors in orbit with the other planets gravity which pulls with other planets orbit. Peace Out! K.T
yes it has about 360000 thousand rings rotating around it
MercuryVenusEarthMarsVenus
No
Saturn has rings made of ice
The planets with rings are typically the gas planets, which are Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. The rings are usually just substances such as ice, rock, and dust. With that said, the planets without rings are Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars. Pluto also does not have rings, but it is not an official planet anymore. These planets are all made of more solid rocks and minerals, and they are all smaller than the gas planets, since they are denser.