1. Venus...................470C
2. Mercury.................430C
3. Earth......................20C
4.Mars.......................-20C
5. Jupiter...................-150C
6. Saturn...................-180C
7.Uranus...................-210C
8. Neptune................-220C
9. Pluto.....................-230C
The highest temperature is 22°C and the lowest is 11°C.
Jupiter's highest temperature occurs at its core, estimated to be around 24,000°C (43,000°F). At the top of Jupiter's clouds, the temperature can drop to as low as -145°C (-234°F).
The lowest temperature in the sun's visible surface (photosphere) is around 5,500 degrees Celsius, while the highest temperatures in the sun's core can reach up to 15 million degrees Celsius. However, in the sun's outer atmosphere (corona), temperatures can soar to several million degrees Celsius.
In the bass clef, the spaces from highest to lowest are A (highest), C, E, and G (lowest). Therefore, when ordered from highest space to lowest space, the sequence is A, C, E, G.
Mercury has the highest surface gravity of the terrestrial planets. Its gravity is about 0.38 times that of Earth's gravity.
Highest: 860°F in Venus Lowest: -224°C in Uranus
The highest temperature minus the lowest temperature is the temperature range. The temperature range is how many degrees is in between the highest and lowest temperatures.
The highest temperature is 22°C and the lowest is 11°C.
Well the highest is 50.3 C. I don't know about the lowest.
To calculate the range in temperature, subtract the lowest temperature from the highest temperature in the data set. This will give you the spread of temperatures from the lowest to the highest in the range.
103 LOWEST 56
Don't arrange it at all. Call the first temperature in the list "lowest" and also "highest". Then go down the list. If a temperature is bigger than "highest", re-set "highest" to that temperature, so that further values will be compared with that. Equally, if a temperature is lower than "lowest", re-set "lowest" to that temperature, so that furher values will be also compared with that. Eventually you will reach the end of the data, with "highest" and "lowest" giving the values you want.
The difference is 598 degrees Celsius
The highest temperature ever was 103 degrees, which was recorded on July 29, 2009. The lowest recorded temperature was 0 degrees, which was recorded on January 31, 1950.
Highest was 41.6 C at Los Angeles, and the lowest was -28.3 C at Balmaceda.
southeast
A maximum-minimum thermometer is commonly used to measure the highest and lowest temperatures of a day. It consists of two separate thermometers where one records the highest temperature reached and the other records the lowest temperature.