high penetration index shows low temperature susceptibility, low penetration index shows high temperature suspectibility.
Defining Jupiter's surface is a bit of a complex problem. That said, unless you literally define it in terms of temperature or something related to temperature, no, it would not be constant.
It is hard to exactly define temperature in terms of such things - but roughly speaking, the temperature is the average kinetic energy (energy of movement) per particle, per degree of freedom.
It is hard to exactly define temperature in terms of such things - but roughly speaking, the temperature is the average kinetic energy (energy of movement) per particle, per degree of freedom.
It is hard to exactly define temperature in terms of such things - but roughly speaking, the temperature is the average kinetic energy (energy of movement) per particle, per degree of freedom.
It is hard to exactly define temperature in terms of such things - but roughly speaking, the temperature is the average kinetic energy (energy of movement) per particle, per degree of freedom.
No. Temperature not only applies to the atmosphere, but basically to any object. More relevant, temperature - while hard to define - is more closely related to the AVERAGE energy per particle (and per degree of freedom).
Define "climate". Note the importance of temperature.
define class string
In a daily temp. average, there is high and low, also the term mean temperature. Define mean temperature.
temperature
it is the lowest temperature at which a liquid changes into semi solid and loses all its flow characteristics.
At fixed pressure, the temperature is directly proportional to the volume