No.
NO, the Sun is not the hottest star. The hottest stars are the blue and white ones. The Sun is a medium sized star. The reason we find it so hot is because it is the nearest star to us
NO, the Sun is not the hottest star. The hottest stars are the blue and white ones. The Sun is a medium sized star. The reason we find it so hot is because it is the nearest star to us
NO, the Sun is not the hottest star. The hottest stars are the blue and white ones. The Sun is a medium sized star. The reason we find it so hot is because it is the nearest star to us
NO, the Sun is not the hottest star. The hottest stars are the blue and white ones. The Sun is a medium sized star. The reason we find it so hot is because it is the nearest star to us
No, the Sun is not the hottest place in the universe. There are other extreme environments like the cores of massive stars, supernovae, and regions around black holes where temperatures can be much hotter than the surface of the Sun.
there is a variety, but they are all on earth
the sun's core is the hottest part of the sun
The hottest region of the sun is the core.
Nothing is. The sun is the hottest thing on earth. This is why even on earth, we feel the COMPLETE HOTNESS. If the sun wasn't this hot, earth would have not had the correct climate that humans can live with. But to other parts of the universe the sun isn't the hottest thing because if there are aliens on another far away planet they will only see it as a star and that means they have a bigger star that is their sun and hotter to them. So it depend where you are out there in the universe.... for now
It is very likely magma. The hottest known object in the universe is the sun or a supernova (exploding star). ~KKMG1
In it's core where the temperatures exceeds 15,000,000 Kelvin
The hottest star in the universe is the blue hypergiant star known as R136a1, with a surface temperature of about 40,000 degrees Celsius.