i think it is what ever weather earth is :)
Rome has a Mediterranean climate with hot summers and mild winters. Overall, it tends to be more hot than cold in Rome.
64 is considered warm. It is not cold or hot.
Hot
Cold is to freezing.
Hot.
It is not necessarily cold above the atmosphere. In direct sunlight, it can be quite hot.
It gets hot and cold. Hot because there is no atmosphere so the sun's rays get in much easily. Cold because there is not atmosphere to trap the heat and don't forget the moon rotates so it still has day and night.
It doesn't have an atmosphere to regulate the temperature.
The outside layers of the atmosphere are very cold, as they get little heat from the Sun. The surface is unreachable beneath the hot, extremely dense lower atmosphere.
Hard to say, as the distance from the star will also factor in, but in general, thin atmosphere would mean no insulation, it would be cold. Mars is a classic example of a planet having a thin atmosphere. It is extremely cold on Mars and has a small amount of carbon dioxide in it's atmosphere but is not in high enough concentration to warm the planet. Mercury has no atmosphere and it is hot and cold depending on which part of the planet is facing the Sun. Venus has a very dense amosphere and it is very hot, no matter which surface is facing the Sun.
Venus' thick atmosphere and closer relation to the Sun makes it astonishingly hot. Hot enough to melt lead and sulphur.
It is very hot on the side that is facing the sun and very cold on the side that is not facing the sun. This is because Mars has a very thin atmosphere.
Hot air rises in the atmosphere because it is less dense than cold air, creating a buoyant force that causes it to move upward.
The earth is protected by its atmosphere.
Mercury has no atmosphere so it is EXTREMELY hot in sunny side and EXTREMELY cold in parts of the planet
The Moon has no protective atmosphere, as Earth does. On Earth, the atmosphere absorbs part of the heat, and moves it around.
It is a relatively cold atmospheric layer, only slightlywarmer than the exosphere (the outer most layer of Earth's atmosphere).