As the planet Jupiter has no surface, the temperature of the "surface" cannot be measured.
Jupiter can be either temperature it depends on the other planet temperature's.
Jupiter is a gas giant planet, and it is not considered to have a solid surface for a temperature comparison like rocky planets. However, its outer atmosphere is extremely cold, with temperatures dropping as low as -145 degrees Celsius.
No Jupiter cant get very cold. Jupiter is the hottest planet we have. that like asking can Uranus and Neptune get hot and those are the coldest planets
Jupiter is not really hot then you think it is =]!! Actually, the surface of Jupiter is VERY cold about -250 degrees. But the core is about 5000 degrees (f)
Jupiter doesn't really have a clearly defined 'surface', so it's difficult to define its surface temperature, but it's about 163 K, which is about -110 C or -160 F.it can be bothThe temperature on Jupiter is very cold, 250 degrees (f) below zero to be exact, but at the center it is very hot. It is more that 50,000 degrees (f).Jupiter is a cold planet on the outside, but it is hot deep inside.
As with any planet, the interior of Jupiter is quite hot, but at the level in its atmosphere where pressure is similar to what we find on Earth it is actually quite cold.
Jupiter's surface is not solid like Earth's, it's a gas giant made mostly of hydrogen and helium. The visible "surface" is actually just the top layer of clouds in its atmosphere. It has features like colorful bands, swirls, and the Great Red Spot, which is a massive storm larger than Earth.
Venus and Mars are the least alike in our solar system. Venus is a hot, inhospitable planet with a thick atmosphere and surface temperatures hot enough to melt lead, while Mars is a cold, arid planet with a thin atmosphere and surface temperatures that can reach below freezing.
Jupiter is too cold for liquid water because it is a gas giant planet with extremely low temperatures reaching hundreds of degrees below freezing. Water on Jupiter exists in the form of ice or vapor due to the extreme cold temperatures.
No, Jupiter is not freezing. Jupiter is a gas giant planet composed primarily of hydrogen and helium, and its core is thought to be extremely hot. The outer layers of Jupiter's atmosphere can reach temperatures as low as -145 degrees Celsius, but the planet as a whole is not freezing.
Jupiter's surface temperature is cold, much colder than that of the four inner planets. The core temperature of Jupiter is very high though, maybe around 36,000 Kelvin or so - with extremely high pressures. Jupiter's core temperature is so high because the mass of the planet is much greater than any other planet.
There is no Geology as such. Jupiter is a Gas Giant and has no surface as such. The gases become increasingly hot and dense towards the centre. Speculations of the constitution of Jupiter's centre include very hot, very dense liquid metal of some sorts.