Take for example, there is a fire. The closer you stand to the fire, the warmer it is. The further you stand away from the fire, the colder it is. This is the same for the temperature on planets and distance from the sun. But that doesn't apply to the planet Venus. Although Venus is the SECOND closest to the sun, it's the hottest because the hot air is trapped in its dense atmosphere. It's kind of like a greenhouse on Venus.
No. The surface gravity of a planet is a product of its size and mass. It has nothing to do with distance from the sun. However, a planet farther away from the sun will experience a weaker pull from the sun's gravity.
venus since it is far away from sun though pluto is also far away now-a-days we are not considering it as planet.
The further a planet is from the sun, the less light and heat radiation it gets from the sun leaving it a cooler planet. However, a planet with a gaseous atmosphere is less likely to radiate away the planets heat so it may retain more of the solar heat.
Because - the further you are away from the Earth's surface - the lower the temperature is.
There are many planets further away from Pluto but they do not orbit the sun so they are not part of our solar system. There are also many stars that are further away from Pluto.
The further away a planet is from the sun the colder it is, the closer a planet is the hotter the planet is.
the temperature on the planet tend to get colder
the further away you are from the sun the colder the place is.
The temperature of a planet varies with the distance from the sun because the sun is hot and the closer something is to the sun, the hotter the object gets. The further away the planet from the sun, the colder the planet.
The temperature of a planet varies with the distance from the sun because the sun is hot and the closer something is to the sun, the hotter the object gets. The further away the planet from the sun, the colder the planet.
The temperature of a planet varies with the distance from the sun because the sun is hot and the closer something is to the sun, the hotter the object gets. The further away the planet from the sun, the colder the planet.
Venus does not get colder when further away from the sun because its thick atmosphere traps heat, creating a runaway greenhouse effect. This results in Venus having a very high surface temperature, despite being further away from the sun than Mercury.
The colser you are to the sun the more hotter you will be. The more fether away you are the coolder so that is why neptune is the coolest planet because it is fether away from the sun unlike mecery wich is the hottest because the clostest planet to the sun.
The temperature of a planet varies with the distance from the sun because the sun is hot and the closer something is to the sun, the hotter the object gets. The further away the planet from the sun, the colder the planet.
The temperature of planets can vary depending on the path of their orbit around the sun. The closer the planet is to the sun - such as Mercury - the hotter the planet is. And because that planet is so hot, it actually has no ozone layer. As you gradually get further away from the sun, the colder the planets become. Pluto is the coldest planet (or sub planet) because of how far it is away from the sun. It goes over -260 degrees! Planets in the middle (AKA the Rocky Planets) are ranged from warm to high, going from Venus to Neptune . Also, the biggest planet it's possible to stand on is Jupiter, and if you stood on it, you would weigh twice as much because of the amount of Gravity on there.
The temperatures of the 8 major planets change as you get further away from the sun for the same reason the temperature changes as you move farther from a fire. Heat radiates, but loses intensity the farther you move away from the heat source. The only apparent exception to this is Venus, which is hotter than Mercury even though it's further away from the Sun. This is because Venus has a runaway greenhouse effect due to its atmosphere trapping heat.
No. The surface gravity of a planet is a product of its size and mass. It has nothing to do with distance from the sun. However, a planet farther away from the sun will experience a weaker pull from the sun's gravity.