The two brightest rings around Saturn are the A and B rings. The B ring is located inside of the A ring.
Saturn has rings round it that are considered beautiful because they look beautiful in a telescope.Saturn is known for its rings - all together it has seven. The ones that we can see from earth (using a telescope) are the two big rings and one faint one. We can see Saturn's rings because they are the brightest when compared to any other planet. From Earth we see these beautiful rings that look like hula-hoops, but Saturn's rings are actually many particles all going around in orbit and aren't solid at all. Scientists say that the rings are composed mainly of ice particles. The rings are 250,000 km in diameter and are less than a kilometer thick. But Saturn is not the only planet with rings. In 1977, it was discovered that Uranus, Neptune and Jupiter all have rings around them but none are as visible as Saturn's many rings.
Saturn is often one of the brightest objects in the night sky, and it can be seenwithout a telescope if you know when and where to look. With binoculars or alow-power telescope, you can begin to glimpse two bulges around its disk, whichmore powerful, sophisticated, and expensive equipment reveals as its rings.
there isn't two there is four Jupiter Saturn Uranus and Neptune
Mars has two prominent rings that are composed of primarily dust and rocks. These rings are relatively small compared to other planets' rings, such as those around Saturn.
Saturn!
no just one
The major division in Saturn's rings is called the Cassini Division. It is a large region that separates Saturn's rings into two main sections.
Saturn is most famous for having rings. You can even see them with a simple telescope. Other planets have rings. Neptune, Uranus and Jupiter do, though their rings are much hard to see that those of Saturn.
Saturn has two bright prominent rings plus a fainter third ring that can be seen from Earth. In addition, Saturn has several less prominent rings.
The largest ring of Saturn is the 8th ring - probably to be called the "O" ring or super ring as the smaller and more familiar rings are called A,B,C,D,E and F. The "super" ring is about 1.5 million kilometers thick and orbits fifty time further out that the other rings. See related link for a artistic rendering of the ring.
The two humps observed by Galileo on the planet Saturn were later revealed to be the rings of Saturn when they were viewed through more powerful telescopes. Galileo did not have a clear view of the rings' true nature due to limitations in his equipment.
~the answer is ice and dust~