NASA - National Aeronautics and Space Administration
  + Space Place en Español
Skip Navigation
Lea en Español
Play Games!
Fun Projects
Cool Animations
Cool Subjects
Amazing Facts
Space Place Friends Share
Saturn in true color Why does Saturn have rings?
Scientists have ideas about why Saturn has rings, but no one knows for sure.
What are Saturn's rings made of? Are they solid like the CD you used to make your model? Or are they made of many particles dancing in formation around the planet? Three robotic spacecraft from Earth have already visited Saturn--Pioneer 11, Voyager 1, and Voyager 2. They revealed many surprising things about Saturn's rings.
The small color differences in Saturn's rings have been enhanced in this picture from Voyager 2 data. False color rings
Rings showing Cassini Division This Voyager 2 picture shows the gap in the rings called the Cassini Division.

Over 60 bright and dark ringlets show up in this color enhanced image from Voyager 2 data. 60 ringlets
The rings are about 400,000 kilometers (240,000 miles) wide. That's the distance from the Earth to the Moon! But the rings are as little as 100 meters (330 feet) thick. They range from particles too tiny to see to "particles" the size of a bus. Scientists think they are icy snowballs or ice covered rocks.
There are actually many rings--maybe 500 to 1000. There are also gaps in the rings. (That's why we put some black rings on our model Saturns.)
Cassini on its way to SaturnThe Cassini spacecraft arrived at Saturn in July 2004, and is still in orbit. It is studying Saturn, its rings, and its moons much more thoroughly than the earlier spacecraft could.

Cassini also carried a probe, called Huygens (HOY-guns), that parachuted into the atmosphere of Saturn's giant moon Titan. Huygens sent back amazing information and images from this strange world whose surface we have never seen.

Click here for movie Here's a QuickTime movie of the Cassini spacecraft releasing the Huygens probe (665 Kb).
Click here for movie Here's a QuickTime movie of the Huygens probe landing on Titan (632 Kb).
Cassini and Huygens have made exciting new discoveries.

FirstGov - Your First Click to the US Government   NASA Logo
Webmaster: Diane Fisher
Last Updated: April 23, 2008
+ Contact Space Place