Social Sciences, asked by srirameee11, 1 month ago

What are the rings around Mars Jupiter and Uranus made of?​

Answers

Answered by shakunthdhs
0

Answer:

the answer is hear

Explanation:

The rings are not a series of tiny ringlets as many think, but are more of a disk with varying density. They consist mostly of water ice and trace amounts of rock, and the particles range in size from micrometers to meters.

Answered by HarshitKumar07
0

Answer:

Jupiter's rings are formed from dust particles hurled up by micro-meteor impacts on Jupiter's small inner moons and captured into orbit. If the impacts on the moons were any larger, then the larger dust thrown up would be pulled back down to the moon's surface by gravity

The majority of Uranus's rings are opaque and only a few kilometres wide. The ring system contains little dust overall; it consists mostly of large bodies 20 cm to 20 m in diameter.

And mars have not yet any ring .

Pls mark me as brainliest if you are also space lover .

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