it can't hit it but it can gone through it
It is highly unlikely for Uranus to be crushed by an asteroid due to its massive size and strong gravitational pull. The probability of an asteroid colliding with Uranus and causing significant damage is very low.
Uranus is located outside the asteroid belt, further away from the Sun than the asteroid belt. It is the seventh planet from the Sun in our solar system.
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.
Yes. It has happened countless times.
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.
Scientists thought that an asteroid or satellite hit Uranus with a enormous impact that caused Uranus to tip on a 970 angle.
It is highly unlikely for Uranus to be crushed by an asteroid due to its massive size and strong gravitational pull. The probability of an asteroid colliding with Uranus and causing significant damage is very low.
yes! it depend to gravitational pull and the weight of an asteroid
A huge asteroid hit it and made it tilt. the only way it can stand straight again is if a huge asteroid hits it again.
Almost certainly.
Uranus is located outside the asteroid belt, further away from the Sun than the asteroid belt. It is the seventh planet from the Sun in our solar system.
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.
YES IT HAS YES IT HAS YES IT HAS YES IT HAS
Yes. It has happened countless times.
The planets that are after the asteroid belt are: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, [Pluto].
It's an outer planet, outside the asteroid belt.