The surface of the sun is about 4000 °C, but the core is roughly 15 million.
The biggest planet in our solar system is Jupiter, the smallest planet is Mercury, the hottest planet is Venus due to its thick atmosphere trapping heat, and the coldest planet is Neptune, located farthest from the Sun.
Not on your life. The highest layers of the atmosphere are the coldest, and the hottest season in the US occurs at the time when the Earth is farthest away from the sun.
Neptune is farthest from the SunUranus is the coldest planet in our solar system
Yes, stars can be as hot as the sun and even hotter. The temperature of stars varies depending on their size, age, and stage of evolution. The sun is a relatively small, average-temperature star compared to others in the universe.
no it is very hot but it isnt the hottest that we know of
hottest temperature was 50.6 °C
neptune
14800 at hottest at coldest 7600
The biggest planet in our solar system is Jupiter, the smallest planet is Mercury, the hottest planet is Venus due to its thick atmosphere trapping heat, and the coldest planet is Neptune, located farthest from the Sun.
The hottest are specified as type O stars and have temperatures > 30,000 that of our Sun (E.g. Zeta Orionis) The coldest are specified as type M starts and have temperature < 0.08 that of our Sun (E.g. Betelgeuse) See link for more information
The difference between the hottest temperature of 134F and the coldest temperature of -128F is 262 degrees Fahrenheit. This represents the range of temperatures between the two extremes.
The hottest temperature is 100.4oF. The coldest temperature is 34.2oF
No, its one of the coldest planets as it is so far from the sun. Venus is the hottest planet (although Mercury is closer to the sun).
Not on your life. The highest layers of the atmosphere are the coldest, and the hottest season in the US occurs at the time when the Earth is farthest away from the sun.
Not on your life. The highest layers of the atmosphere are the coldest, and the hottest season in the US occurs at the time when the Earth is farthest away from the sun.
Not on your life. The highest layers of the atmosphere are the coldest, and the hottest season in the US occurs at the time when the Earth is farthest away from the sun.
Planet (in order from sun)Average temperature in KelvinAverage temperature in 'CRanked in order of coldest to hottestMercury*340677Venus7354628 (hottest)Earth287.214.056Mars210-635Jupiter**165-1084Saturn**134-1393Uranus**76-1972Neptune**72-2011 (coldest) *This is the average temperature at the equator. Unlike the other planets Mercury has a huge range in surface temperature due to lack of atmosphere. At the equator, the surface temperature on Mercury can range from 100K (-173'C) to 700K (430'C).**temperature at the 1.0 bar pressure level