My answer is the sun because if you get close to the sun you could admedentlly or quickly die!
add. But as for Man made, then Atomic fission would be the most energetic reaction that we control.
The torches that cut through metal I think get as hot as the suns surface
The hottest ever recorded man made temperature on earth is 7. 2 trillion degrees Celsius. It was recorded in the RHIC (Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider) in 2012.
The furthest man-made object from Earth is space probe Voyager 1,launched 1977.It is,as of May 9,2011,about 17,300,000,000km from the Sun.
The first man made object put into Earth orbit.
The hottest man-made object ever created is the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN, which can reach temperatures of around 7-10 trillion degrees Celsius (13.5-18 trillion degrees Fahrenheit) during collisions.
Yes he is also the hottest man on earth everyone loves him
The first man-made object to circle the Earth in 1957 was the Soviet satellite Sputnik 1. It was launched on October 4, 1957, and marked the beginning of the space age.
One man-made object that orbits the sun is the International Space Station (ISS). It orbits Earth at an average altitude of approximately 420 kilometers (260 miles) and travels around the Earth about every 90 minutes.
OF COURSE!!HE IS THE HOTTEST MAN ON EARTH.
Outside the laboratory, it would have to be the core of a nuclear reactor.Inside the laboratory, it has to be either the collisions in a particle accelerator,or the experiments in fusion containment ... both of those are places wherethe definition of temperature changes somewhat from how we understand it.
The farthest man-made object from Earth is Voyager 1 spacecraft, which was launched by NASA in 1977. It has since traveled beyond our solar system and continues to transmit data back to Earth. Hubble Space Telescope is in low Earth orbit and not as far from Earth as Voyager 1.
The hottest natural flame on Earth is found in lightning bolts, which can reach temperatures of around 30,000 Kelvin. In terms of man-made fires, oxy-acetylene flames in welding torches can reach temperatures of around 3,200 degrees Celsius.