no...asteroids....
The asteroid belt is part of the Solar System, if that's what you mean.
It is not inside of the Asteroid Belt in the sense of being part of it. In terms of the order of orbits from the Sun, Mars is inside the orbit of the Asteroid Belt and Jupiter's orbit is outside the orbit of the Asteroid Belt.
Yes. Ceres is the only dwarf planet located in the asteroid belt.
yes
The asteroid belt separates the inner and outer planets [See related question], however, the ice or frost line [See related question} is the crucial reason for the differences in structure and composition.
Considering the Asteroid Belt is made up of Dwarf Planets, asteroids, pebbles, grains and dust, it's difficult to be precise. As a combination, the best answer would be anywhere from grey to black.
Each individual member of the asteroid 'belt' is in its own elliptical orbit around the sun.
the Asteroid belt has no satelites all the asteroids that make up the belt is another asteroids satelite so there would be thousands of satelites
When traveling from Mars to Jupiter, you pass through the asteroid belt. This region is located between the two planets and is made up of numerous asteroids orbiting the Sun. Despite its reputation in science fiction, the asteroid belt is quite sparse and easy to navigate through.
Because relatively speaking they are tremendously small compared to planets and stars thus the only time they will come up is if they are in a cluster like the asteroid belt in our solar system.
Orion's belt is made up of three stars: Alnitak, Alnilam, and Mintaka. They are some of the most recognizable stars in the night sky and are located within the constellation of Orion.
The largest object in the asteroid belt is Ceres at about 580 miles across. It is classified as a dwarf planet rather than an asteroid.