Pluto's surface temperature varies between -235 degrees Celsius and -210 degrees Celsius.
-34 degrees calceis
The min and max temp of mars i 1,299 degrees celcius and -1,000,000 degrees celcius
-229 degrees Celsius
Average MAX temp is 104 degrees - Average MIN temp is 64 degrees
#include<iostream.h> void main() { double sum=0,avg,max=0,min=100,temp[12]; char *Month[]={"Jan", "Feb", "Mar", "Apr", "May", "Jun","Jul", "Aug", "Sep", "Oct", "Nov", "Dec"}; for(int j=0;j<12;j++){ cout << "Enter the temperature of month :"<<*(Month+j)<< endl; cin >> temp[j]; sum=sum+temp[j]; } avg=sum/12; for(int i=0;i<12;i++){ if(temp[i]>max) max=temp[i]; if(temp[i]<min) min=temp[i];} cout << "Average temperature of the year: " << avg << endl; cout << "Maximum temperature of the year: " << max << endl; cout << "Minimum temperature of the year: " <<min << endl; }
Pluto's temperature is -230 * C.
Max Temp went out of business
No. The temp on Pluto is well below minus 400 degrees F.
It's not. the temp of Pluto is about 15 degrees Kelvin (near 400 degrees (F) below zero) the temp of the sun is about 6000 degrees
-34 degrees calceis
The min and max temp of mars i 1,299 degrees celcius and -1,000,000 degrees celcius
Pluto is one of the coldest celestial bodies, with an average surface temperature of -380 F. Pluto is 30 to 50 times the Earth's distance from the sun.
The max temp is somewhere around 240 or 250. Just stay under or around 210 and you should be fine.
No, it lowers both the max and min temperature.
-229 degrees Celsius
How is anybody suppose to know that
#include<stdio.h> #include<conio.h> void main(void) { int max=0,min=0; int temp; int n,i; clrscr(); printf("what is the lenght of number set?\n"); scanf("%d",&n); printf("\n\nNow enter the numbers\n"); for(i=1;i<=n;i++) { scanf("%d",&temp); if(temp>max)max=temp; if(i==1)min=temp; if(temp<min)min=temp; } printf("\n\nThe range of set is %d",max-min); getch(); }