The distance between the orbits is, on average, about 550 million kilometers or 342 million miles. There is some variation because of the eccentricities of the orbits.
Mars is too far from Jupiter to be significantly affected by its gravity.
No. Comets orbit the sun. Many asteroids orbit the sun in between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.
Mars has a smaller orbit than Jupiter.
No, the moons of Mars (Phobos and Phoebe) orbit Mars. Jupiter is another planet and has its own moons.
No, the Oort Cloud is a spherical region of icy objects that lies far beyond the orbit of Neptune, extending out to about halfway to the nearest star. It is not located between Mars and Jupiter, which is where the asteroid belt is found.
The orbit of Jupiter is closer to Mars' orbit than to Saturn's orbit. Mars = 1.52AU Jupiter = 5.20AU Saturn = 9.54AU Having said that, the positions of the planets are always changing as the planets orbit the sun at different rates. Mars is the closest planet to Jupiter as of February 2011, but this is not always the case.
Tiny planets that orbit between Mars and Jupiter are called asteroids.
Asteroids are rocky bodies that orbit the sun in a belt between Mars and Jupiter.
yes
The asteroids.
Earth is 1 AU from the Sun. There is no planet at an orbit of 2.5 AU. (Mars orbits at 1.5 AU and Jupiter at 5.2 AU).
Asteroids