Surface of the sun is hotter.
The inner core is hotter then the sun's surface.
The outer core is liquid. Its pressure is low enough and its temperature high enough for it to melt. The inner core is solid. Both its pressure and temperature are higher than the outer core, but the increased pressure overwhelms the increased temperature, keeping the inner core from melting.
The sun is millions of degrees hotter than the earths core! (:
Center of the sun
the core is more than a thousand times hotter than the surface.
The inner core is hotter then the sun's surface.
The outer core is liquid. Its pressure is low enough and its temperature high enough for it to melt. The inner core is solid. Both its pressure and temperature are higher than the outer core, but the increased pressure overwhelms the increased temperature, keeping the inner core from melting.
Supposedly, the Earth's core is hotter than the surface of the Sun.So, IF the two collided, the material of the Earth's core would make the Sun hotter, at least until or as the material is burned or converted into the Sun's energy. In this theory, only 1 Earth would make the Sun hotter.
The sun is millions of degrees hotter than the earths core! (:
The sun.
no the surface of the sun is much is hotter.
The Sun's core is FAR hotter than the surface. The surface of the Sun is ONLY 11,000 degrees, while the core of the Sun is about 35 MILLION degrees. (And at that point, does it really matter what kind of degrees we're talking about?!?!?)
No it is not, however it is similar to that of the sun's surface
of the earth yes the core of the earth is around the temp. of the outside of the sun
The reason why the surface of the sun is colder than the sun's core is because the surface is father from the core of the sun.As you get deeper and closer to the sun's core,it gets hotter and hotter because your getting closer to the sun's core which is 15,000,000 F and 13,000,000 C
No, the Sun, even the coolest part of the surface, is still hotter than the Earth's core. But the core is close: as high as 5500 degrees Celsius (9900 °F), compared to about 5800-6000 °C for the photosphere of the Sun. (The core is hotter than sunspots, which range from 2700°C to about 4200°C.)
the sun