Use this equation to convert degrees Fahrenheit (ºF) to degrees Celsius/Centigrade (ºC): [°C] = ([°F] - 32) × 0.556
880 degrees Fahrenheit
The melting point of Ag2Se (silver selenide) is approximately 830 degrees Celsius.
The four hottest planets in our solar system are Venus, Mercury, Earth (due to greenhouse gas effect), and Mars. Venus holds the top spot as the hottest planet, with surface temperatures reaching up to 880 degrees Fahrenheit (471 degrees Celsius) due to its thick atmosphere of carbon dioxide. Mercury follows, experiencing extreme temperature variations, ranging from about -290 degrees Fahrenheit (-178 degrees Celsius) to 800 degrees Fahrenheit (427 degrees Celsius). Earth's surface temperatures vary but can be affected by the greenhouse gas effect, and Mars reaches temperatures of up to 70 degrees Fahrenheit (20 degrees Celsius) on its warmest days.
Venus has the highest surface temperatures in the solar system, with temperatures reaching up to 880 degrees Fahrenheit (471 degrees Celsius) due to its thick atmosphere of carbon dioxide and sulfuric acid clouds that trap heat.
Lead and several other substances would melt on the surfaces of Mercury and Venus. Mercury's mean surface temperature: 167oC (333oF) Venus' mean surface temperature: 464oC (867oF)
Venus has the highest daytime surface temperature in our solar system, reaching up to 880 degrees Fahrenheit (471 degrees Celsius). This extreme temperature is due to Venus' thick atmosphere that traps heat from the Sun through its greenhouse effect.
Well hello there, friend! Venus can get surprisingly hot from all those layers in its atmosphere trapping heat. Temperatures on Venus can reach up to about 900 degrees Fahrenheit (about 475 degrees Celsius)! Isn't that just incredible? Just like how the best things in life sometimes come from unexpected places.
Actually, eight Soviet Venera spacecraft soft-landed on Venus's brutal surface in the 1970's and 1980's. None lasted for more than approximately two hours because temperatures there are high enough to melt lead and the atmospheric pressure is 90 times that on Earth! Four of these spacecraft managed to take pictures (6 altogether) of the stark terrain surrounding their landing sites because windows made out of diamonds protected the camera lenses.
Venus has the highest average surface temperature of any planet in our solar system, reaching about 880 degrees Fahrenheit (471 degrees Celsius). This extreme temperature is due to its thick atmosphere, which is composed mainly of carbon dioxide and creates a strong greenhouse effect that traps heat.
The hottest planet is Venus. Although Mercury is closer to the Sun, Venus has a thick atmosphere made up mostly of greenhouse gas carbon dioxide, which traps the Sun's heat and keeps the planet's surface at a temperature of around 450 degrees Celsius - hot enough to melt lead. Mercury can get almost as hot during the day, but as it has very little atmosphere to trap the heat, its surface freezes at night, making it almost as cold as Jupiter's cloud tops. Now that the former coldest planet Pluto is no longer considered a true planet, the coldest planet in the Solar System is now Uranus, with a temperature at the cloud tops at -224 Celsius. Although Neptune is further from the Sun, it has a strong internal heat source, keeping its cloud tops - by a few degrees - warmer than those of Uranus.
880
Half of 880= 880/2= 440