20063.6273 degrees celcius
it will orbit the sun it self and the sun will keep it in the right spot for its temperature
A sun spot
No, they are two different things. A sun spot is a cooler spot on the sun and a hot spot is a violent explosion
You are mistaken. The red spot is on Jupiter, not the sun (and it actually is red in color, hence the name).
Sun spot
there is about over 10,000,000 sun spots on the sun
False. When any spot on the earth is on the side facing the sun, that spot experiences a condition known as "daylight". At the moment when that spot is pointing directly toward the sun, the moment is called local "noon". The sun is then highest in the sky at that spot, and shadows are the shortest. All of these phenomena take place during the portion of the axial rotation period known at that spot as "day".
Sunspots.
No. That spot is light and it is day.
If the sun's rays hit the Earth's surface at a direct spot, which is usually around the equator, that area would be the warmest. Any area that is far away from the sun's rays is usually cold.
Occasionally. That's what a sunspot is, or more precisely, that's why a sunspot is a dark spot. The surface temperature of the sun is generally ~5,780 degrees Kelvin, while sunspots are usually between 3000-4000 K - by no means "cold", of course. This causes them to show up darker than the rest of the surface.
The temperature of the sun stays constant. At night, you are facing away from the sun, and the Earth is beyween you and the sun.