Saturn is well known for its magnificent system of planetary rings. However, Saturn is not the only planet in the solar system to have rings. Jupiter also has a faint system of planetary rings that consists mostly of dust. Its ring system is made of a thick inner, faint torus of dust and particles known as the “halo ring” and a thin and relatively bright outer “main ring” made of dust ejected from the moons Metis and Adrastea plus small bodies (rocks) resulting from high-velocity impacts. At greater distances, two other wider and fainter components complete the system of rings, the so-called “gossamer rings” named for the moons Amalthea and Thebes of whose material the rings are composed. The model features an artist’s view of the rings of Jupiter.