Jupiter's gravity kept planetesimals from accreting
No. The asteroid belt is an area where there are more asteroids than in other parts of the solar system It is not a planet, nor is there enough mass in the asteroid belt to form a whole planet.
There certainly is enough material in the asteroid belt to form another planet, however the immense gravity of Jupiter prevented a planet from forming.
Scientists theorize that the asteroid belt did not form a planet due to the gravitational influence of Jupiter disrupting planet formation. Jupiter's strong gravity prevented the material in the asteroid belt from accreting into a planet.
In old texts it was believed that the asteroid belt was the remains of a planet that got torn apart by either a massive impact or the gravitational attraction of Jupiter and the Sun. Nowadays it is firmly agreed that the asteroid belt is a primitive remainder of the early accretion disc and a planet didn't form because of the gravitational attraction of Jupiter and the Sun.
Between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter is the Asteroid Belt, which includes the dwarf planet Ceres.
No. The asteroid belt blocks the planet from being as well as the size and distace of the planet
the gravitational forces from Jupiter's powerful gravity disrupted the process of planet formation in the asteroid belt region. This prevented the mass of material in the asteroid belt from coalescing into a planet. Additionally, the gravitational interactions between Jupiter and the material in the asteroid belt prevented a single planet from forming.
The asteroid belt is theorized to be pieces of what was supposed to be a planet located between Mars and Jupiter. These pieces, or planetesimals, were unable to come together to form a larger planet because they were pulled apart by gravity.
The asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter formed from leftover rocky planetesimals that never coalesced to form a planet due to the gravitational influence of Jupiter disrupting their formation. Jupiter's strong gravity prevents the asteroids from clumping together to form a planet.
scientists theorize that it was jupiters gravity that kept it from forming
Jupiter's massive gravitational force, (along with Mars lesser gravitional force) prevented the asteroid belt from forming into a planet. Either that or it was a small planet (like Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars) that was smashed to bits after a collision with a very large object and the bits eventually formed into the asteroid belt.
No planets form a belt between Mars and Jupiter. The asteroids form the Asteroid Belt in that region, and one of those is now considered to be a dwarf planet, Ceres.