The temperature on the Sun's surface (photosphere) is 6000 degrees Celsius.
So, yes, the sun's surface is very hot.
If it were not for the sun we would be frozen. It is very cold in space. However the Sun's surface temp. is 5510 C. Too hot for us!!!
the surface of the sun is hot
Sunspots are actually cooler areas on the Sun's surface, with temperatures around 3700-4200 degrees Celsius compared to surrounding areas that can reach above 5500 degrees Celsius. This temperature difference is caused by the magnetic fields inhibiting the flow of hot gases from below the Sun's surface.
Yes! Stars are made out of many gases that are extremely hot. But a sun can also have black spots on its surface which are cold.
No. Even the "coolest" stars have surface temperatures of thousands of degrees. An orange star is not as hot as out sun, but is still quite hot.
No. The Sun is never cold it is always hot.
chance but for and ,the air was cold and the sun was hot?
its hot
The outside layers of the atmosphere are very cold, as they get little heat from the Sun. The surface is unreachable beneath the hot, extremely dense lower atmosphere.
There isn't anything in the desert to absorb the heat from the sun, nor to keep it on the surface when the sun goes down.
The surface of the sun is 5,778ºK, which is about 10,000,000ºF.
a sunspot is a area on the sun's atmosphere a solar flare is a very hot surface of the sun. -stephanie kinghorn- a sunspot is a area on the sun's atmosphere a solar flare is a very hot surface of the sun. -stephanie kinghorn- a sunspot is a area on the sun's atmosphere a solar flare is a very hot surface of the sun. -stephanie kinghorn- a sunspot is a area on the sun's atmosphere a solar flare is a very hot surface of the sun. -stephanie kinghorn- a sunspot is a area on the sun's atmosphere a solar flare is a very hot surface of the sun. -stephanie kinghorn-