No - The simple reason is that magma is molten rock, and the Sun is a ball of gas.
The different layers of gas that comprise the Sun may have similar behavior to magma, such as convection currents, but i think magma is only found on rocky planets (unlike Jupiter and other gas giants) where conditions are suitable.
Not all rocky planets have magma either, E.G. Mars. Mars is solid rock and (maybe) ice and consequentially has no magma, active volcanoes, plate tectonics, earthquakes or magnetic fields.
The lava-like material that the sun shoots out is called plasma. It is a hot, ionized gas consisting of charged particles like protons and electrons. This solar plasma can create solar flares and coronal mass ejections.
No. The sun is composed of hydrogen and helium plasma. It is much hotter than lava.
It depends on what is burning. While lava can be as hot as 2200 F, some flames can be much hotter, such as 3600 F or more, while a candle flame can be as low as 1800 F.It would depend. Lava is hotter than a typical wood or coal-buring fire, but some flames, such as that of an acetylene torch, is hotter than lava.
The sun is not made out of lava. It is actually too hot to keep anything in a solid or liquid state so everything that it is made of is in a gaseous state. The sun is mostly made up of hydrogen and helium.
hydrogen.
yes the sun are full of lava if sun get closer to earth the earth will melt!!
Lava domes usually consist of rhyolite or dacite lava.
Wikipedia gives the range of magma temperatures as normally between 700 C and 1300 C. Lava is magma that has been forced out into air or water.
Yes. The sun is much hotter and even the hottest lava.
No. The sun made mostly of hydrogen and helium. It is far hotter than lava.
Yes. Lava is 700° to 1250° Celsius and the Sun is 5496.85 degrees Celsius.
Lava itself is not crystalline as it is liquid. Crystals are solid. However, lava can contain crystals of minerals that have started to solidify.
Lava is magma that is erupted onto Earth's surface. The temperature is essentially the same, except for the cooling that may occur after eruption.
lava, the sun, possibly elictric radiation from the sun
No, Krypton is not used in lava lamps. Lava lamps typically contain a mixture of wax and a colored liquid, which is heated by an incandescent bulb to create the lava-like movement.
The thickness of lava is generally dependent on the eruption rate of the volcano. The flow rate of lava is measured by the lava's viscosity. Highly viscous lava does not flow well or travel great distances. Low viscosity lava can flow for great distances.
No, lava lamps contain a special type of wax that is heated by a light bulb, causing it to rise and fall in a mesmerizing pattern. The term "lava lamp" comes from the lamp's resemblance to flowing lava, but there is no actual lava involved.