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.
They keep Saturn's rings in order.
Only in space. A spaceship on land is called a landship and a spaceship in the ocean is, ironically, misnomered a seaship.
startrek
None. Saturn's rings are not made up of meteorites. See related question below.
The first spaceship to land on the moon was Apollo 11, commanded by Neil Armstrong and piloted by Buzz Aldrin. The historic landing took place on July 20, 1969.
Around Saturns equatorial diameter, as has to be the case
jupiters rings are bigger than Saturns.
got fat
7
When the Voyager passed by.
They are not regenerated. The rings are generated by the gravity of the planet and the inertia of the object.
At saturns rings which is were are some of the moons are also there
The rings that it has and the moons that orbit around it.
A long time ago
There are moons in Saturn's rings, they are called shepherd moons because they help keep the rings intact.
No, the components of Saturn's rings are in the solid state.
Saturn's rings are made of dust, ice, and rock.