spica is hotter. even though btelgeuse is bigger it is not as hot as spica
All stars are hot. A white star is hotter than average with e temperature of about 7,200 to 9,200 degrees Celsius.
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.
A star's temperature is measured by how white-hot its light is, not in Fahrenheit degrees, but in Celsius degrees. Our Sun is white hot, alright, but is a bit toward the yellow side of average. Larger (and hotter) stars may be more on the blue side of average.
Sunspots are typically between 3000-4000 degrees Celsius. This is, relatively speaking, cool compared to the normal photosphere temperature of about 5500 degrees Celsius.
spica is hotter. even though btelgeuse is bigger it is not as hot as spica
Spica is the brightest star in the constellation Virgo.It has a spectral type of B1 and has a temperature of 22,400oK
11 million degrees Celsius
Extremely hot. It'll burn you without touching it
4,666 degrees Celsius is extremely hot. 4,666 degrees Celsius is equal to 8,430.8 degrees Fahrenheit.
89 degrees Celsius is hot because water boils at 100 degrees Celsius
All stars are hot. A white star is hotter than average with e temperature of about 7,200 to 9,200 degrees Celsius.
57.8 degrees Celsius.
30 degrees celsius
pretty hot it is 50 degrees Celsius higher then boiling water
5500 degrees Celsius = 9,932 degrees Fahrenheit.
43.5 degrees Celsius is 110.3 degrees Fahrenheit.