None of them! The asteroid belt isn't a planet or anything of that matter, so it can't be rocky. It's not a gas giant, either, because it's not a giant planet as Jupiter is, and it's not made of gases. There is nothing to support the ice, so it's impossible to be icy. Surprised? Well, that's the answer for you! : $) (that's my beautiful mustache smiley!)
Any planet past the asteroid belt, which is between Mars and Jupiter, is considered a gas giant, except for Pluto. Although Pluto is no longer classified as a planet, when it used to be classified as such, it was the only rocky planet past the asteroid belt.
Ceres is a rocky dwarf planet located in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. It is the largest object in the asteroid belt and is composed primarily of rock and ice.
Jupiter is a gas giant
its a rocky planet
Saturn is classified as a gas giant, primarily composed of hydrogen and helium, with a small rocky core at its center.
Any planet past the asteroid belt, which is between Mars and Jupiter, is considered a gas giant, except for Pluto. Although Pluto is no longer classified as a planet, when it used to be classified as such, it was the only rocky planet past the asteroid belt.
Ceres is a rocky dwarf planet located in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. It is the largest object in the asteroid belt and is composed primarily of rock and ice.
Neither - it is debris left over from the early formation of the planets.
The asteroid belt orbits between the rocky planets and the gas giants.
An asteroid is a minor planet that can lean towards terrestrial objects such as the rocky protoplanet-asteroids of Vesta and Pallas.
Usually a collection of bodies that orbit around a star. Our solar system consists of a rocky planet belt, an asteroid belt, a gas giant belt, a comet belt, and then a comet cloud, all of which fall under the influence of our star's gravity and orbit periodically.
yesThe planets which are closer to the Sun than the asteroid belt are all rocky planets (Mercury, Venus, earth and Mars). Those beyond the asteroid belt are all gas giants (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune).
No. Ceres, which used to be considered an asteroid, was recategorized as a "dwarf planet" in 2006, about the same time that Pluto was. Ceres is a small rocky body, the biggest in the asteroid belt.
Jupiter is an outer planet, also called a Gas Giant. The Main Asteroid Belt divides the inner planets from the outer planets.
the asteroid planet is solid
Jupiter is a gas giant
Saturn is not a terrestrial planet, so it is a gas planet.