yes more than 20 and more and more are being planned after retarted obama gets out of office
Yes it does. Its amazing
yes; two
No. It is a galaxy consisting of hundred of billions of stars. It is many times larger than any asteroid belt.
Technically speaking, the asteroid belt doesn't "run through" any planets but between two planets. As such, the asteroid belt is located between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.
The answer depends on "before what".
The asteroid belt is between Jupiter (on the outside) and Mars (on the inside). All the planets inside the orbit of the asteroid belt are called rocky planets.Jupiter and Saturn are called gas giant planetsand the rest are called ice giants.
yes lots of space probes
Any of the several probes and landers that have ever reported data from Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto, or beyond, had to pass through the asteroid belt.
Venus is not in any asteroid belt.
They are not protected from collisions. What helps is that the average distance between asteroids is immense, such that one asteroid is not likely visible to the naked eye to the next nearest asteroid. There is so much space between asteroids the ships generally pass through without any problem. Actually, the rings of Saturn are also so tenuous that the Cassini spacecraft has passed through them with no ill effect, and they are MUCH denser than the asteroid belt.
yes
No there isn't any asteroid's orbiting Mars because its not actually by the asteroid belt the asteroid belt is by Jupiter and Saturn not actually by Mars
There aren't any planets within our solar system that have an asteroid belt themselves. There is, however, an asteroid belt located between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.
No, the asteroid belt orbits the Sun somewhere beyond Mars, but not as far as Jupiter.
no
The Asteroid Belt has no effect on any of the major planets of our solar system.
No. It is a galaxy consisting of hundred of billions of stars. It is many times larger than any asteroid belt.
Technically speaking, the asteroid belt doesn't "run through" any planets but between two planets. As such, the asteroid belt is located between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.
yes