Yes. The Large Hadron Collider produced temperatures of approx 5.5 trillion degrees Celsius.
The earth's average global temperature has risen 0.75 degrees Celsius (approx 1.3oF) in the last hundred years.A:The earth has warmed by 0.9 degrees Fahrenheit in the past 100 years. A:0.82 degrees Celsius.Approximately 0.6 degree Celsius.
The mesohere,the boundary between the Thermosphere and Mesosphere, is technically the coldest place on Earth, with a temperature of −100 degrees Celsius (−148.0 degrees fahrenheit; 173.1 K).
There is a great range of temperatures on Earth. These temperatures range from far be low zero to more than 100 degrees Fahrenheit just on Earth's crust.
The average temperature of Florida is about 80oF
The Boiling Point Temperature is 212 degrees Fahrenheit and 100 degrees Celsius
It can do.
A fridge or a woodburning stove.
Certainly. The surface temperature of the sun is approx 5500 deg C.
The temperature of Antarctica can plunge to well below minus 100 degrees F and the temperature in the Sahara may exceed 130 degrees in some areas.
The Gobi Desert can approach or even exceed 100 degrees F. in the summer but the temperature can drop to near -40 degrees F. in winter.
It sure can.
When it is the night it can be -160degrees C and 100 degrees C when it is day
Raccoons can survive in climates that drop below 0 degrees F in the winter and survive in areas where temperatures may exceed 100 degrees F in summer.
The earth's average global temperature has risen 0.75 degrees Celsius (approx 1.3oF) in the last hundred years.A:The earth has warmed by 0.9 degrees Fahrenheit in the past 100 years. A:0.82 degrees Celsius.Approximately 0.6 degree Celsius.
Mars is only about 100 degrees colder than the Earth, which makes it closer than any other planet. But there are NO other planets with a temperature "similar" to Earth's.
Light to moderate exercise is okay. Just as long as your body temperature doesn't exceed 100 degrees (or higher than your own body temperature), it should be fine.
Some cold deserts such as the Great Basin and Gobi Deserts may approach or exceed 100 degrees F. in the summer.