The sun is 4.6 billion years old. It is largely composed of hydrogen and helium. The sun is about 110 times bigger than the earth. It has many layers. The surface of the sun is called the photosphere. Its density is from one-millionth, to one ten millionth as dense as water. The photosphere gives off the sun's energy in forms of heat and light. Most of the sunlight we see is from its pebbly surface. The photosphere is 340 miles thick and it's temperature s range from 5,500 °C to 6,000 °C. It has dark spots called sunspots which are the only solar activity observable by the naked eye. Above the photosphere the temperature is about 4,000 °C above that, the temperature rises to 27,800 °C. The region consists of hot gases in violent motion and is called the chromosphere. It displays fountains of flaming gases. The next layer below the photosphere is the convection zone. It is 60,000 miles thick and it's temperature can reach 2 million °C. The radiation zone is directly below the convection zone. Energy from the core rebounds for centuries before surfacing, and it is 300,000 miles thick with a temperature at up to 6.5 million °C. The core of the sun is under 200 billion times the pressure of the earth's surface. It is 60,000 miles thick and has a temperature that does not exceed 15 million °C. It's so hot that hydrogen is fused into helium.
The temperature in the stratosphere rises because it absorbs ultraviolet radiation from the Sun. This radiation heats up the ozone layer in the stratosphere, causing the temperature to increase with altitude.
Sunspots are generally cooler than the surrounding areas of the sun, with temperatures ranging from about 3700°C to 4200°C, compared to the average surface temperature of around 5500°C. This temperature difference is due to the strong magnetic fields inhibiting the flow of hot plasma to the surface, creating a cooler region.
in the sun.
WHAT INSTURMENT DOES MY FATHER SUN SUN JOHNSON
The Sun can not face away from the Sun.
300000 degree Celsius
no
the tux is the freakin key!
Kelvin
hotter than the mantle.
Kelvin Celsius Fahrenheit
Solid. Not to be put in water (But fun) :)
actually its called temperature smart one
the temperature in Germany is about 70 degrees to 90 degrees.
If you keep it dry and room temerature, decades.
Between 54 and - 89 degrees celsius
100 degrees Centigrade or 212 degrees Fahrenheit