It is so hot (6000K) that you will be turned into plasma (the atoms of your body will disassociate into electrons and the nuclei (protons and neurons)
You go *poof* into ash.
you are instantly incinerated. that's if you survive long enough to even get within 10 miles of the sun.
Yes it would.
stuff happens Hydrogen atoms need nearly 30 kT to be torn apart This happens on the surface of the sun We can tell this from the line spectra
no they would burn if they got within miles of the sun.
Everywhere within billions of miles.
The Moon is closest to Earth out of the options provided. The average distance from the Moon to Earth is about 238,855 miles, while the Sun is approximately 93 million miles away. Clouds are much closer to Earth's surface than either the Moon or the Sun, typically forming within the lowest few miles of the atmosphere.
The distance of 120,000 miles is equivalent to approximately 193,121 kilometers.
The closest point we can get to the Sun is at the surface of the solar system's inner planets, with Mercury being the nearest at about 36 million miles (58 million kilometers) away. Spacecraft can get much closer; for instance, NASA's Parker Solar Probe is designed to approach within about 4 million miles (6.4 million kilometers) of the Sun's surface. However, extreme temperatures and radiation levels present significant challenges for any mission approaching the Sun.
No. Even if you had a way to get there, you would be ashes thousands of miles before you reached the surface of the sun.
Energy from the sun that is absorbed by the Earth's surface is reflected back into the atmosphere or absorbed by land and water and transformed into heat.
Energy from the sun that is absorbed by the Earth's surface is reflected back into the atmosphere or absorbed by land and water and transformed into heat.
Theoretically any Thermonuclear Fusion Explosions (what happens on the surface of the sun) are the same heat.