The one with rings easily visible from Earth is the planet Saturn.
There are much fainter rings around the other gas giants, the planets Jupiter, Uranus, and Neptune.
orbit
No, four planet has no rings they are inner planets
Jupiter has 4 known sets of rings. Neptune has five rings and Uranus has 13. Saturn has the most complex system, with about 7 sets of rings. No gas planet has only 3 rings.
Mercury is the planet that has no rings and one moon.
Jupiter has hundreds of Trojan asteroids circling along its orbit. These Trojans are located in two groups ahead of and behind Jupiter in its orbit around the Sun.
yes it does
No. Unless you count all the satellites and space junk that is circling the earth.
Uranus is the planet out of the Jovian planets that does not have rings.
well when something is orbiting a planet that means an object is basically circling the planet due to its gravitational pull. Rotation is the planets rotation not the object surrounding circling it.
orbit
Earth does not have rings.
Both moons and rings are objects circling a planet. The difference is that the mass of dust or ice in a ring is not concentrated into a single object. The dynamics of a ring system keep the smaller chunks (from microscopic to truck-sized) from agglomerating into a moon. Some planetary rings are thought to have formed from the partial breakup of small, icy moons.
No, four planet has no rings they are inner planets
The planet that has 12 faint rings is Uranus.
rings surrounding planet mars? NONE.
The planet J1407-B has 37 rings.
There is no planet with large rings and icy rocks. Saturn has rings, but it is not a rocky planet - it is a gas giant.