Yes, for example, water when you boil it in a kettle or pot. However, it won't stay that way; when different materials are in contact (in this case, the kettle and the colder air), there is a natural tendency for heat to flow from the hotter to the colder object.
Fifteen degrees celcius is a temperature not a latitude. Latitude is shown in degrees north or degrees south
It is: -7-15 = -22 degrees
The answer depends on the amount of water vapour in the air.
No object that can reasonably be described as a "planet" is fifteen million degrees Fahrenheit. That sort of temperature is associated with the cores of stars (or rare events in the solar corona).
This is a positive temperature on the Celsius scale and negative on the other scales.
The interior angles of a fifteen sided polygon amount to 2340 degrees.
Yes, a tilt of fifteen degrees would create seasons. The tilting of Earth's axis is what causes different regions to receive varying amounts of sunlight throughout the year, leading to seasonal changes in temperature and day length.
Normally, just as shown in the question, as "15 degrees north latitude", or rarely "fifteen degrees north latitude". These are both expressions of the parallel 15° N.
Fifteen degrees.
This is Fifteen Degrees.
5 degrees
For sure I don't know the general temperature of the sun. The sun's surface, also known as the photosphere is about 5,500 degrees Celsius. The sun's core is about fifteen million degrees Celsius. There are other parts like the radiation zone and the convection zone, but I do not know the temperature for the other parts. Hope this was use full information to you.