Temperature increases as you go deeper inside Earth, with the highest temperatures ocurring in the core.
As you start to tunnel beneath the surface, the surrounding rock is cool.Than about 20 meters down, your instruments report that the rock is getting warmer. For every 40 meters that you descend from that point, the temperature rises 1 Celsius degree. This rapid rise in temperature continues for several tens of kilometers. After that, the temperature increases more slowly, but steadily high temperatures inside Earth are the result of heat left over from the formation of the planet. In addition, radioactive substance inside Earth releases energy. This further heats the interior.
It gets hotter as you go towards the core or the center of the earth
I hoped this helped :-)
The closer you get to space - the lower the temperature gets.
It gets hotter the deeper one goes because of the heat generated by the Earth's core.
it gets hotter and the presure get harder
Because the center of the Earth (which is solid) is surrounded by a molten outer core of nickel/iron at a temperature of 6,000C, (as hot as the surface of the Sun). This heat is caused by the radioactive decay of heavy radioactive elements that sank to the core with the iron cascade.
No One Can't Dig A Tunnel In The Middle Of The Earth Because The Tempature Inside Earth Gets Hotter As You Go Deeper. It Is Around 9000F (5000C) In The Center. It Is So Hot Inside Earth That Rocks Melt.
Heat
The Outer Core. It Is Classified As A Liquid...Not A Solid (Like you think it would be;; That's what I got confused on) The evidence we have is that Scientists and those study people send waves down into earth and when the waves slow down they have hit liquid and when hit something solid they speed up and the deeper you go into the earth, the hotter it gets obviously. Hope this helps!
Temperature increases as you go deeper inside Earth, with the highest temperatures ocurring in the core.
As you go deeper into the Earth, you very quickly reach a point where the temperature is constant year-round. Both temperature and pressure increase as you go deeper into the Earth.
As you go deeper into the Earth, you very quickly reach a point where the temperature is constant year-round. Both temperature and pressure increase as you go deeper into the Earth.
increase
The deeper into the Earth you go it gets hotter and hotter.
As you go deeper into the earth the temperature increase. The rate at which the temperature increases is called the geothermal gradient.
Temperature and pressure increases.
temperature and pressure density and the force of gravity
The pressure increases as you go deeper. The deeper you go the greater the pressure
The pressure increases as you go deeper. The deeper you go the greater the pressure
when you go up in the air the more pressure you feel it is the same when you go deeper under water
It gets hotter. About 1 degree F. every 100 feet.