The asteroid belt is a region of the solar system falling roughly between the planets Mars and Jupiter where the greatest concentration of asteroid orbits can be found.
It is termed the main belt when contrasted with other concentrations of minor planets, since these may also be termed asteroid belts. In this usage, it often refers only to the greatest concentration of bodies with semi-major axes between the 4:1 and 2:1 Kirkwood gaps at 2.06 and 3.27 AU, with eccentricities less than about 0.33, and with inclinations below about 20°. This region is marked in red in the diagrams below, and contains approximately 93.4% of all numbered minor planets.
The asteroid belt region of space also contains some main-belt comets which may have been the source of Earth's water *.
In this sense the asteroid belt can be considered a relic of the primitive Solar System, but it has been affected by many processes active in later periods, such as internal heating, impact melting, and space weathering. Hence, the asteroids themselves are not particularly pristine. Instead, the objects in the outer Kuiper belt are believed to have experienced much less change since the solar system's formation.
An old theory that is much less favoured these days was that the asteroids in the asteroid belt are the remnants of a destroyed planet.
Despite popular imagery, the asteroid belt is mostly empty. The asteroids are spread over such a large volume that it would be highly improbable to reach an asteroid without aiming carefully.
Nonetheless, tens of thousands of asteroids are currently known, and estimates of the total number range in the millions. About 220 of them are larger than 100 km. The biggest asteroid belt member is Ceres, which is about 1000 km across. The total mass of the Asteroid belt is estimated to be 3.0-3.6 kilograms, which is 4% of the Earth's Moon. And of that total mass, one-third is accounted for by Ceres alone.
The high population makes for a very active environment, where collisions between asteroids occur very often (in astronomical terms). A collision may fragment an asteroid in numerous small pieces (leading to the formation of a new asteroid family), or may glue two asteroids together if it occurs at low relative speeds. After five billion years, the current Asteroid belt population bears little resemblance to the original one.
The inaccurate image of an overcrowded Asteroid Belt is especially frequent in science fiction films, apparently because it makes for dramatic visual images which the true nearly empty space does not provide. (The movie A Space Odyssey (film) is unusual in that it does portray realistically the ship's "encounter" with a lone asteroid pair).
On the other hand, written depictions of human encounters with asteroids, their mining and their colonization - an increasingly frequent SF theme since the late 1940s - are more often scientifically accurate.
For more examples see Asteroid and Asteroids in fiction.
Belts of dust or debris have also been detected around stars other than the Sun, including the following:
| Star | Distance (ly) | Orbit (AU) |
|---|---|---|
| Epsilon Eridani | 10.5 | 35-75 |
| Vega | 25 | 86-200 |
| AU Microscopii | 33 | 210 |
| HD 69830 | 41 | <1 |
| 55 Cancri | 41 | 27-50 |
| HD 139664 | 57 | 60-109 |
| HD 53143 | 60 | ? |
| Beta Pictoris | 63 | 25-550 |
| Zeta Leporis | 70 | 2.5-12.2 |
| HD 107146 | 88 | 130 |
| Fomalhaut | 133 | 25 |
| HD 12039 | 137 | 5 |
| HR 4796 A | 220 | 200 |
| HD 141569 | 320 | 400 |
| HD 113766 | 430 | 0.35-5.8 |
The orbital distance of the belt is an estimated mean distance or range, based either on direct measurement from imaging or derived from the temperature of the belt. The Earth has an average distance from the Sun of 1 AU.
Asteroidengürtel | Sió-he̍k-chheⁿ-toà | Астероиден пояс | Cinturó d'asteroides | Asteroidebælte | Asteroidengürtel | Cinturón de asteroides | Asteroida zono | Ceinture d'astéroïdes | Cinto de asteroides | 소행성대 | Asteroidni pojas | Smástirnabeltið | Fascia principale | חגורת האסטרואידים | ಎಸ್ಟೆರೊಇಡ್ ಪಟ್ಟಿ | Planetoïdengordel | 小惑星帯 | Asteroidebeltet | Asteroidebeltet | Pas planetoid | Cintura de asteróides | Centură de asteroizi | Главный пояс астероидов | Asteroid belt | Pásmo planétok | Asteroidivyöhyke | Asteroidbältet | Tiểu hành tinh | 小行星带
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"Asteroid belt".
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