Current thinking is that the Asteroid Belt never constituted a single terrestrial body in the past; for whatever reason, there was not enough mass in the Belt for the matter there to accrete into a single body, as happened in the case of Earth or Mars, e.g.
Yes, or at least in our solar system. Pluto lies outside of the asteroid belt, but it is not considered a planet anymore, so is does not count as terrestrial. Mars, Venus, Earth, Mercury, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune are all located inside the asteroid belt.
No. Our solar system has two, while earth itself does not.
no
Mars is on the inside of the asteroid belt.
Of the four planets outside of the asteroid belt, Neptune is the farthest.
Mars is the last of the inner planets. It is the fourth planet from the Sun and right before the Asteroid belt.
The planets inside the asteroid belt that surrounds the sun
The "inner" planets are on the "inside" of the asteroid belt, while the "outer" planets are on the "outside" of it
planets that are inside the asteroid belt
Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars are often called terrestrial planets.
The Asteroid Belt
The answer is the asteroid belt.
The Asteroid Belt is a demarcation between the gas giants and terrestrial type planets.
The planets inside the steroid belt will get hit and the other planets will not.
Mars is on the inside of the asteroid belt.
Terrestrial planets and moons of both gaseous and terrestrial planets. Don't forget Dwarf planets and the asteroid belt.
Not sure.
Of the four planets outside of the asteroid belt, Neptune is the farthest.
What separates them is between Mars and Jupiter. It's called the asteroid belt.
Mars is the last of the inner planets. It is the fourth planet from the Sun and right before the Asteroid belt.