15.000.000.00 C
No, Rigel is hotter than the Sun. Rigel is a blue supergiant star with a surface temperature that is much hotter than the Sun.
Yes, Rigel has a much higher luminosity than the Sun, being around 120,000 times more luminous. However, it also has a lower surface temperature than the Sun, with a surface temperature of around 11,000 Kelvin compared to the Sun's temperature of approximately 5,500 Kelvin.
Yes, much, much hotter. Lava temp = 700 to 1,200 °C (1,292 to 2,192 °F). Temperature of the Sun's visible Surface (the photosphere) = 5727 °C (10341 °F). Temperature of the Sun's core = 15699727 °C (28259541 °F).
The Sun's outer layer called the photosphere has a temperature of 6,000 degrees Celsius or 11,000 degrees Fahrenheit. Deep within the core of the Sun the temperature is 15,000,000 degrees Celsius or 27,000,000 degrees Fahrenheit.
The temperature of the sun stays constant. At night, you are facing away from the sun, and the Earth is beyween you and the sun.
If the Sun's temperature were much colder and it were much smaller Earth would no longer support human life
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
earth
That is the approximate temperature at the center of the sun. The visible surface is much cooler at about 10,000 degrees.
The sun is much smaller and cooler.
No, Rigel is hotter than the Sun. Rigel is a blue supergiant star with a surface temperature that is much hotter than the Sun.
No. The extreme temperature of the sun would incinerate a human body much before a person could go on the sun.
Yes, Rigel has a much higher luminosity than the Sun, being around 120,000 times more luminous. However, it also has a lower surface temperature than the Sun, with a surface temperature of around 11,000 Kelvin compared to the Sun's temperature of approximately 5,500 Kelvin.
Yes, much, much hotter. Lava temp = 700 to 1,200 °C (1,292 to 2,192 °F). Temperature of the Sun's visible Surface (the photosphere) = 5727 °C (10341 °F). Temperature of the Sun's core = 15699727 °C (28259541 °F).
The brightness of a star depends not just on its surface temperature, but also on its size and distance from Earth. While Rigel is hotter than the Sun, it is also a much larger and more luminous star. Therefore, even though the Sun is cooler than Rigel, it appears brighter to us because it is much closer and has a larger luminosity due to its size.
The Sun's outer layer called the photosphere has a temperature of 6,000 degrees Celsius or 11,000 degrees Fahrenheit. Deep within the core of the Sun the temperature is 15,000,000 degrees Celsius or 27,000,000 degrees Fahrenheit.
Too much rain Not as much sun Different altitudes