It obviously does not.
Our sun's surface temperature averages, by direct spectral measurement, approximately 10,000o Fahrenheit, or 5500o Celsius or 5774o Kelvin. Internal temperature depends mainly upon which particular model of her thermodynamics you personally support. The sun's surface temperature is 6,000 degrees Celsius, 11,000 degrees Fahrenheit. The center of the sun is ~15700000 degrees Celsius.
Because of it's thick CO2 atmosphere and slow rotation, Venus maintains an average temperature of around 460 °C (860 °F) whether it is "day" or "night". :)
snow will fall when it is about 10.degrees Fahrenheit
Of course it has high temperature(above 50 degree of Celsius), hot, vapor on the water surface, smoke.
The temperature of the sun's corona reaches at least one million degrees and possibly more. This is strange because the surface of the sun has temperatures of five thousand degrees. The corona is much farther away and logically should be cooler.
It does not! The temperature range is -190 to 430 degrees C.
It does not! The temperature range is -190 to 430 degrees C.
The average temperature of the surface of Uranus is -224° Celsius.
The average surface temperature of Neptune is around -353 degrees Fahrenheit (-214 degrees Celsius).
480 degrees Celsius
21 degrees celsius
484 degrees Celsius
About 9100 degrees Celsius.
About 7900 degrees Celsius, surface temperature.
The average surface temperature on Mars is 20 degrees Celsius at noon at the equator. At the poles, the temperature drops down to -153 degrees Celsius.
The temperature of the sun's surface is around 5,500 degrees Celsius (9,932 degrees Fahrenheit). In its core, the temperature is much higher, reaching around 15 million degrees Celsius (27 million degrees Fahrenheit).
The temperature of the sun's surface is around 5,500 degrees Celsius, while the core temperature reaches about 15 million degrees Celsius.