Generally, yes. Asteroids are found throughout the solar system, but the "asteroid belt" is an enormous toroidal (doughnut-shaped) region of space between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. Uranus is well beyond this distance.
No. Uranus is much larger than any asteroid.
Any planet past the asteroid belt, which is between Mars and Jupiter, is considered a gas giant, except for Pluto. Although Pluto is no longer classified as a planet, when it used to be classified as such, it was the only rocky planet past the asteroid belt.
The outer planets are those on the other side of the Asteroid Belt away from the Sun. They are Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. The inner planets are inside the Asteroid Belt towards the Sun. They are Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars. Uranus is an outer planet.
no
No.
Uranus is a outer of asteroid belt because if it was inner that would be closer to the sun but, Uranus is outer because if it was inner the sun will melt Uranus cuz Uranus is made out of ice so Uranus is outer.
If you mean which side is Uranus on of the asteroid belt it's on the gaseous side.
Saturn isn't located in the asteroid belt. In the solar system, you have the sun, mercury, venus, earth, mars, the asteroid belt (separating terrestrial and jovian planets) then jupiter, saturn, uranus, and finally neptune. Pluto is not a planet.
The planets that are after the asteroid belt are: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, [Pluto].
It's an outer planet, outside the asteroid belt.
It's an outer planet, outside the asteroid belt.
Scientists believe that while the universe was forming, the asteroids were just forming the asteroid belt when suddenly, an asteroid smacked into Uranus, tilting it on its side.