Mars
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 not an asteroid and it is not located in the asteroid belt; it is a dwarf planet, and it is beyond the orbit of Neptune, in the outer system.
Pluto's orbit DOES NOT overlap the orbit of the asteroid Ceres. But it does overlap the orbit of the planet neptune
The asteroids are located between the orbit of Mars and the Jupiter. The asteroids are believed to be the remain of a planet that once used to orbit the sun.
From the sun it goes Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, ASTEROID belt, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto (although no longer classed as a planet). So the earth is inside the orbit of the asteroid belt.
Jupiter is outside the asteroid belt, which is located between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. Jupiter's orbit is closer to the asteroid belt than the terrestrial planets like Earth and Mars, but it is still outside the main region of the asteroid belt.
Yes, the asteroid belt starts properly after the orbit of Mars.
It was not an asteroid. It was a planet. The name starts with an 'M'.
The Asteroid Belt is located in between the orbit of Mars and Jupiter.
The asteroid belt is beyond the orbit of Mars.
A dwarf planet is a body that orbits the sun - is often beyond the orbit of Jupiter and is classified below a planet. An asteroid is a body that orbits the sun within the asteroid belt.
From the sun it goes Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, ASTEROID belt, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto (although no longer classed as a planet). So the earth is inside the orbit of the asteroid belt.