The outer core is liquid. Its pressure is low enough and its temperature high enough for it to melt.
The inner core is solid. Both its pressure and temperature are higher than the outer core, but the increased pressure overwhelms the increased temperature, keeping the inner core from melting.
The earths core is 2,000 degrees hotter then the suns surface. but the sun's interior is way hotter than the middle of the earth. :)
The earth's core temperature is about as hot as the sun's surface.
Sun's core is hotter..Because..The sun get bigger and hotter..Because of Carbon dioxide...
higher
very much hotter.
The sun is millions of degrees hotter than the earths core! (:
Yes
The Earth's core is aboutthe same temperature as thesurface (photosphere) of the Sun. That temperature is around 5,500 Celsius.Bear in mind that there is still some uncertainty in the estimated temperature of the Earth's core.(Recent work suggests the Earth's core may be hotter than previous estimates.)Note that the Sun does not have a uniform temperature.It varies tremendously, from the core out to the "corona".The Sun's core is much hotter than the Earth's core.
because the core has a radiator in it.
very much hotter.
The sun is millions of degrees hotter than the earths core! (:
no
The moon is believed to have a metallic core similar to that of Earth, but smaller in proportion to the moon than Earth's core is to Earth.
it depend on you position on earth
The Earth's core is aboutthe same temperature as thesurface (photosphere) of the Sun. That temperature is around 5,500 Celsius.Bear in mind that there is still some uncertainty in the estimated temperature of the Earth's core.(Recent work suggests the Earth's core may be hotter than previous estimates.)Note that the Sun does not have a uniform temperature.It varies tremendously, from the core out to the "corona".The Sun's core is much hotter than the Earth's core.
The Earth's core is aboutthe same temperature as thesurface (photosphere) of the Sun. That temperature is around 5,500 Celsius.Bear in mind that there is still some uncertainty in the estimated temperature of the Earth's core.(Recent work suggests the Earth's core may be hotter than previous estimates.)Note that the Sun does not have a uniform temperature.It varies tremendously, from the core out to the "corona".The Sun's core is much hotter than the Earth's core.
Jupiter's central core is much hotter than earth because the mass compresses more the more mass compress and the more mass a planet has, the hotter it is.
Yes it is
Yes
Yes it is
The Earth's core is aboutthe same temperature as thesurface (photosphere) of the Sun. That temperature is around 5,500 Celsius.Bear in mind that there is still some uncertainty in the estimated temperature of the Earth's core.(Recent work suggests the Earth's core may be hotter than previous estimates.)Note that the Sun does not have a uniform temperature.It varies tremendously, from the core out to the "corona".The Sun's core is much hotter than the Earth's core.