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Earth's core temperature estimate: 5000-6000 degrees C

The sun's core temperature: 15,000,000 degrees C

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For completeness, the Sun's surface temperature is about 5000ºC.

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6y ago
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12y ago

The Earth's core is slightly warmer than the sun's surface. You don't have to go

too deep inside the sun before the temperature rises to equal the temperature

of the Earth's core. And if you go to the sun's core, you find temperatures there

of literally millions of degrees ... temperature at which nuclear fusion takes place,

which you might say is the temperature at the center of the hydrogen bomb when

it's in the process of exploding.

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13y ago

The core of the sun is way, way hotter than the earth interior. In fact, it is millions of degrees hotterThe surface temperature of the sun is slightly cooler than the earths core, this is why researchers can only drill down into the earths interior to a certain depth due to the fact that the pressure and heat is to intense to do so.

Different types of stars, ranging from Colour, have different surface temperatures. For instance, a blue star has the highest surface temperature and highest core temperature, and a red star has the coolest surface temperature. Here is the order starting with the coolest stars which are low sequence stars. Beginning with red stars.

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13y ago

At about 5505 °C, scientists believe that the core temperature of the earth is about as hot as the suns surface, which is around 6000 °C. The core of the sun is reckoned to be around 14.5 million °C though.

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12y ago

The heat in the inner core of the Sun is released asa by product of Nuclear Fusion. The Sun converts about 700,000,000 tons of Hydrogen into 695,000,000 tons of Helium each second by this fusion process. The mass difference 5,000,000 tons is converted into energy (by Einstein's E-MC2 formula) and it is this constantly produced heat that makes the Sun shine - makes it a star.

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13y ago

Science is abouts thoeries one theory is that as the Earths Core travels trough the Suns magnetic field it induces current that heat it up (In my opinion it would cause the Earth to decelerate in the same way energy is tranferred in a generator) another theory is that nuclear reactions fuelled by radioactive material (Dense material go down unlike a hot air balloon so the core could be made up from a relatively high percentage radioactive material). The presure could describe the high temperature as in the gas volume pressure relationship

It most probably is a combination of the above mentioned theories.

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13y ago

No. Heat will go from hotter to colder objects, not the other way round - and the Earth's core is quite a bit hotter than the surface. The Earth's core is heated by the decay of radioactive isotopes.

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15y ago

The inner core [See Link] of the Earth, may have a temperature similar to the Sun's surface

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12y ago

No, the sun's surface is NOT hotter than its core, in fact it is alot colder.

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11y ago

No. Nothing on the Earth is hotter than the core of our Sun.

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