It's asteroids, of course!
True... the asteroid belt can be found between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.
The asteroid belt is sometimes referred to as the "main belt," while the Kuiper belt is also known as the "Edgeworth-Kuiper belt."
The asteroid belt in our galaxy is located between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. This region is known as the Main Asteroid Belt and contains a large number of rocky bodies of various sizes orbiting the Sun.
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.
Eris is located in the what is known as the scattered disk, beyond the kyper belt. Ceres is the only dwarf Planet in the asteroid belt. See related question.
The planet Mars orbits immediately closer to the Sun than the Asteroid Belt. The so-called "main belt" has many millions of asteroids, the remnants of a failed planetoid that might have formed between Mars and Jupiter.Mars. The asteroid belt lies between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.
Eris is located in the what is known as the scattered disk, beyond the kyper belt. Ceres is the only dwarf Planet in the asteroid belt. See related question.
Mars is not in the asteroid belt. The Asteroid Belt is between Mars and Jupiter.
The asteroid belt is in between Mars and Jupiter.
The asteroid belt is not in Jupiter.
Venus is not in any asteroid belt.
The main asteroid belt is actually called the asteroid belt - pretty dull really.