a regular lightning bolt is x3 hotter then the sun.Now if ur wondering how the sun is gas that burns in outer space that doesnt break air but lightning is an eletrick bolt that is sudden breaks air and hits ground.And the sun is in outer space which is deadly cold but the sun is heated from cold like if u put ur hand in ice water i believe.
No. The sun is actually hotter than Betelgeuse, but much smaller.
No, the sun is not the hottest of all stars. There are stars that are up to 7 times hotter than the sun.
Yes, there are many stars that are hotter than the sun. For example, blue stars are typically hotter than the sun, with surface temperatures reaching tens of thousands of degrees Celsius compared to the sun's 5,500 degrees Celsius.
yes it is hotter than the sun closest to us [earth]
No, Rigel is hotter than the Sun. Rigel is a blue supergiant star with a surface temperature that is much hotter than the Sun.
lightning is 5 times hotter than the sun.
The suns surface is hotter, estimated to be around 5500-6000 Kelvin.
the sun is about 10000 times hotter than earth
It's not. the temp of Pluto is about 15 degrees Kelvin (near 400 degrees (F) below zero) the temp of the sun is about 6000 degrees
A lightning bolt can be up to 30,000 degrees Celsius, while the surface of the sun is about 5,500 degrees Celsius. Therefore, a lightning bolt can be around 5.5 times hotter than the surface of the sun.
Hotter than the sun, because than is used when comparing, and your comparing something's hotness versus the sun's hotness.
No. None of the planets is hotter than the sun.
No it is not. the suns core is 15 million degrees Celsius. Lightning does not even come close to that hot. Lightning is, however, about 5 times hotter than the surface of the sun.
Yes it is because it is the closest to the Sun.
No It really depends on which sun ur referring to. The sun may be hotter than a sun in another galaxy and colder than another!!!
No, the Sun, even the coolest part of the surface, is still hotter than the Earth's core. But the core is close: as high as 5500 degrees Celsius (9900 °F), compared to about 5800-6000 °C for the photosphere of the Sun. (The core is hotter than sunspots, which range from 2700°C to about 4200°C.)
No. The sun is actually hotter than Betelgeuse, but much smaller.