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The center of the sun is about 15 million degrees Celsius. The visible surface is about 5,500 degrees Celsius.
4 million degrees Fahrenheit (2.2 million degrees C).
At the sun's core it is 15 million degrees Celsius or 27 million degrees Fahrenheit
The temperature of the Sun's core is estimated to be about ~15.7×106 Kelvin (16 million degrees Centigrade or 28 million degrees Fahrenheit)
No. The sun was a protostar about 4.6 billion years ago.
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Total income surpasses the million dollar mark.
gasps and awes
You get Nuclear Fusion, which produces an enormous amount of energy. The center of the sun, for example, is near 20 million degrees Kelvin
When the core of a protostar has reached about 10 million K, pressure within is so great that nuclear fusion of hydrogen begins, and a star is born.
25 million degrees Fahrenheit = 13,888,871.1 degrees Celsius.
As the gases in a protostar begin to collapse, the central core begins to heat up due to pressure. As more gases are absorbed, the greater the pressure. Once the temperature of the core reaches 10 million degrees K, hydrogen fusion begins, and the star begins it's life on the main sequence. The star will stay on the main sequence whilst it still has hydrogen to fuse. Once all the hydrogen has been used, the star will drop out of the main sequence. Protostar stage in the stellar evolution. [See related question]
59 million degrees Fahrenheit.
No. 27 million degrees Fahrenheit = -2.78 million degrees Celsius.Formula: [°C] = ([°F] − 32) × 5⁄9
A few million degrees - up to a billion or so, in a supernova.A few million degrees - up to a billion or so, in a supernova.A few million degrees - up to a billion or so, in a supernova.A few million degrees - up to a billion or so, in a supernova.
The center of the sun is about 15 million degrees Celsius. The visible surface is about 5,500 degrees Celsius.