It's 287 K on average.
about 10,000 degrees fahrenheit
There is no "temperature of the Earth", nor even a "temperature of the surface of the Earth". Every spot and every time is a little different. The most common temperature of the Earth is about 10,000 degrees, which is about the estimated temperature of the molten core of the Earth.
As you will know, it varies across the planet.The average temperature of Earth's surface has varied between 13.8 and 14.6 degrees Celsius (56.8 and 58.3 degrees Fahrenheit) during the period from 1950 to 1999.In the year 1999, the average global temperature was approximately 14.4 degrees Celsius (57.9 degrees Fahrenheit).The highest recorded has been 56.7oC and lowest -89oC. These temperatures are dry bulb temperatures.By comparison the core of the Earth is estimated to be between 3400oC and 7000oC, hotter than the melting point of steel (around 1500oC) The average temperature is 14° C. That's 287 kelvin, or 57.2° F.As you probably realize, that number is just an average. The Earth's temperature can be much higher or lower than this temperature. In the hottest places of the planet, in the deserts near the equator, the temperature on Earth can get as high as 57.7° C. And then in the coldest place, at the south pole in Antarctica, the temperature can dip down to -89° C.The reason the average temperature on Earth is so high is because of the atmosphere. This acts like a blanket, trapping infrared radiation close to the planet and warming it up. Without the atmosphere, the temperature on Earth would be more like the Moon, which rises to 116° C in the day, and then dips down to -173° C at night.Earth's surface temperature can varies from place to place ofcourse, the current weather also plays a huge role. Then there's the fact of global warming and the sun.All these are usually in constant change but Earth's temperature on average is about 28-34 degrees Celsius.
5 million degrees hahaha jks i dont know
Temperature is an absolute scale that you cannot measure in "times" hotter or colder. The inside of the Sun is several million degrees (in any scale but physicists prefer kelvin as 0 Kelvin is no atomic motion at all). The surface of the Earth is about 280 Kelvin, the interior could be about 5000 K About 367 times. The sun's avg. surface temp. is 5,505°C (9,941°F) and the Earth's avg. surface temp. is 15°C (59°F).
It isn't. Kelvin is a measurement of temperature on an absolute scale (0 Kelvin is the lowest possible temperature, 0 Celsius is about 273 Kelvin). The Earth's core temperature is about 5778 Kelvin around the same as the surface of the sun, so says Wikipedia
-81 degrees. The average temperature on Mars is -61°C. The temperature will vary though depending on the latitude, just like it does on Earth.
about 10,000 degrees fahrenheit
•The surface of Pluto can range from a low temperature of 33 Kelvin (-400 degrees Fahrenheit) and a high temperature of 55 Kelvin (-360 degrees Fahrenheit). The average surface temperature on Pluto is 44 Kelvin ( -380 Fahrenheit.
At its hottest point, temperatures on Mercury can rise as high as 700 Kelvin (430 °C) for the regions directly facing the Sun. And its colder side can get down to 110 Kelvin (-163 °C). But the absolute coldest parts of Mercury are the shadowed parts of the planet's polar craters. These are regions that never see sunlight, and the Mercury surface temperature can get as low as 90 Kelvin (-183 °C).The Mercury average surface temperature, when you even it all out, is 452 Kelvin (179 °C).
65
The temperature of the Earth's inner core is estimated to be around 6000 kelvin.
It obviously does not.
Mean surface temperature (day)107°CMean surface temperature (night)-153°CMaximum surface temperature123°CMinimum surface temperature-233°C
If we could determine the total mass of the universe we might be able to come up with a theoretical upper limit of what is possible, but for all practical purposes the Kelvin scale has no upper limit.
There is no "temperature of the Earth", nor even a "temperature of the surface of the Earth". Every spot and every time is a little different. The most common temperature of the Earth is about 10,000 degrees, which is about the estimated temperature of the molten core of the Earth.
30 degrees Celsius for each kilometer of depth near Earth's surface