Probably a rocky planet similar to Mars, except smaller. All the asteroids combined are not as much mass as Mars is.
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.
There are no planets in the asteroid belt. There are asteroids and the dwarf planet Ceres.
Mars is an "inner planet", but it's not in the main asteroid belt. There are the inner planets, then the asteroid belt, then the outer planets.
The largest object in the asteroid belt is Ceres at about 580 miles across. It is classified as a dwarf planet rather than an asteroid.
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.
The asteroid belt is not in Jupiter.
Depends which way you are heading :-) Mars --> Asteroid Belt <-- Jupiter
No planet ever existed where the asteroid belt is. The mass is insufficient for a planet to have formed from all that debris.
Jupiter is behind the asteroid belt
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. 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.
Our moon is not in the asteroid belt. No planet's moon is in the asteroid belt or it would not be a moon.
The Planet Jupiter is between the planet Saturn and the asteroid belt. On the other side of the asteroid belt is the planet Mars.
None. Ceres is the only dwarf planet in the asteroid belt.
There are no planets in the asteroid belt. There are asteroids and the dwarf planet Ceres.
There are asteroids around, but the asteroid belt is out beyond the planet Mars.
the asteroid planet is solid