Want this question answered?
Venus is over 800 degrees Fahrenheit. Hot enough to melt a lead brick. The hottest temperature recorded on Earth is 136 degrees Fahrenheit in the Sahara Desert. In a nutshell it is A LOT hotter.
The earths temperature varies for example living on the equator it would be hotter but up in the north lets say iceland it would be a lot colder so there is no real earths temperature(unless you get to the core of the earth)
If it didn't, the Earth would keep getting hotter and hotter. We would have to find a way to get rid of some of the heat. As it is, we have roughly an energy balance where we retain about as much energy as leaves the system, and that keeps temperature roughly constant.
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.
very much hotter.
Venus is over 800 degrees Fahrenheit. Hot enough to melt a lead brick. The hottest temperature recorded on Earth is 136 degrees Fahrenheit in the Sahara Desert. In a nutshell it is A LOT hotter.
smeagol
The Sun is much much hotter than the Earth. The Sun's surface temperature is approximately 5,800 K. The surface temperature of the Earth, by contrast, rarely exceeds 331ºK
Because Venus is closer to the sun, it is hotter than the Earth. Comparing temperatures of both these planet, you find that Venus' average surface temperature is 462 degrees Celsius and the Earthâ??s is 14 degrees Celsius.
It gets hotter
It gets hotter
I don't know if's jupiter is hotter or colder than eath
Yes. There is no doubt at all. The earth, the atmosphere and the oceans are getting warmer and warmer.
When it is night on Mercury, it's colder than earth at any given time,but during the day,obviously,there is no comparison,the earth is much colder. BY THE WAY:this is coming from a 13 year old ;) but one that knows her sh*t.
The highest temperature on the Earth was in Death Valley, on July 10, 1913, reaching a temperature of 134F, or 56.7C. The sun, by contrast, is far hotter, being at a temperature of 9,941F, or 5,505C. That is a difference of 9,807F and 5,448.3C.
No. It gets hotter.
it will increase (get hotter).