11 million degrees Celsius
A stars core temperature will be several million kelvins
Helium exists because Hydrogen fuses into Helium in the core of hot stars.
It depends on the color - like how stars work so it would be very very hot!
their temperature gets lower! hot stars--- blue or white average stars--yellow or orange cooler stars: reddish
Yes. Our Sun is also a yellow star and it is about 5,500 degrees Celsius on the outside. It is about 13,700,000 Celsius at the core. Our Sun is considered average compared to a blue star witch is the hottest kind of star in the universe, measuring over 100,000,000 Celsius at the core. One of them is Zeta Orionis.
Nuclear Fusion occurs in the core of stars.
Basically, the amount of hydrogen (mass). The more mass a star has, the greater the pressure in the core. The greater the pressures in the core, the higher the temperature, the higher the temperature, the hotter the star will be, the hotter the star, the blighter the envelope will be.
In stars.In stars.In stars.In stars.
Initially, a star's core is heated by compression as a nebula collapses. Once fusion is up and going, the fusion itself provides the necessary heat.
the earths core gets hot by all the heat on the surface and gose to the core of the earth.
No, Neptune is a planet. Stars are hot, glowing with the heat from nuclear fusion in their core. Neptune is cold, and much too small to have fusion.
Nuclear Fusion at the Stars' Core.