Zoobooks magazine for kids!
Advertisement.

EnchantedLearning.com is a user-supported site.
As a bonus, site members have access to a banner-ad-free version of the site, with print-friendly pages.
Click here to learn more.

Become a member of Enchanted Learning.
Site subscriptions last 12 months.
Click here for more information on site membership.

$20.00/year or other amount
(directly by Credit Card)

$20.00/year or other amount
(via PayPal)

$20.00/year or other amount
(for sending a check by mail)

$20.00/year or other amount
(for subscribing by school purchase order)
As a thank-you bonus, site members have access to a banner-ad-free version of the site, with print-friendly pages.
(Already a member? Click here.)

More Cloze Activities
Asteroid:
Cloze Activity Answers
Fill in the blanks below.
Back to the cloze activity

Word Bank:
planetoids
years
Sun
gaps
gravitational
Mars
moons
km
orbit
Kirkwood
belt
asteroid
Moon
coalesced
atmospheres

Asteroids are rocky or metallic objects, most of which orbit the Sun in the asteroid belt between the planets Mars and Jupiter. A few asteroids approach the Sun more closely. Asteroids are also known as planetoids or minor planets. The first asteroid discovered (and the biggest) is named Ceres; it was discovered in 1801.

About 3,000 asteroids have been cataloged. Asteroids range in size from tiny pebbles to about 578 miles (930 kilometers) in diameter (Ceres). There are about 40,000 known asteroids that are over about 0.5 miles (1 km) in diameter in the asteroid belt. Sixteen of the 3,000 known asteroids are over 150 miles (240 km) in diameter. There are many smaller asteroids. Some large asteroids even have orbiting moons. None of the asteroids have atmospheres.

The asteroid belt is a doughnut-shaped concentration of asteroids that orbit the Sun between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter, closer to the orbit of Mars. Most asteroids orbit from between 186 million to 370 million miles (300 million to 600 million km or 2 to 4 AU) from the Sun. The asteroids in the asteroid belt have a slightly elliptical orbit. The time for one revolution around the Sun varies from about three to six Earth years. The strong gravitational force of the planet Jupiter shepherds (guides) the asteroid belt, pulling the asteroids away from the Sun, keeping them from falling into the inner planets.

The asteroid belt is not smooth; there are concentric gaps in it (known as Kirkwood gaps). These gaps are orbits where the gravitational forces from Jupiter do not let asteroids orbit (if there were asteroids there, they would be pulled towards Jupiter). The Kirkwood gaps are named for Daniel Kirkwood who discovered them in 1866.

The asteroid belt may be material that never coalesced into a planet, perhaps because its mass was too small; the total mass of all the asteroids is only a small fraction of that of the Earth's Moon. A less satisfactory explanation of the origin of the asteroid belt is that it may have once been a planet that was fragmented by a collision with a huge comet.

Go to more on asteroids


Enchanted Learning®
Over 20,000 Web Pages.
Sample Pages for Prospective Subscribers

Overview of Site
What's New
Enchanted Learning Home
Monthly Activity Calendar
Books to Print
Site Index

K-3
Crafts
K-3 Themes
Little Explorers
Picture dictionary
PreK/K Activities
Rebus Rhymes
Stories
Writing
Cloze Activities
Essay Topics
Newspaper
Writing Activities
Parts of Speech

Fiction
The Test of Time
Biology
Animal Printouts
Biology Label Printouts
Biomes
Birds
Butterflies
Dinosaurs
Food Chain
Human Anatomy
Mammals
Plants
Rainforests
Sharks
Whales
Physical Sciences
Astronomy
The Earth
Geology
Hurricane
Landforms
Oceans
Tsunami
Volcano
Languages
Dutch
French
German
Italian
Japanese (Romaji)
Portuguese
Spanish
Swedish
Geography/History
Explorers
Flags
Geography
Inventors
US History

Other Topics
Art and Artists
Calendars
Crafts
Graphic Organizers
Label Me! Printouts
Math
Music

Click to read our Privacy Policy

E-mail


Enchanted Learning Search

First search engine with spelling correction and pictures!
Search EnchantedLearning.com for all the words:
Enter one or more words, or a short phrase.
You can use an asterisk * as a wild-card.



Zoobooks magazine for kids!
Advertisement.



Advertisement.



Copyright ©2003-2008 EnchantedLearning.com ------ How to cite a web page