A temperature of 3000 degrees Kelvin is quite hot. For reference, the surface of the sun is around 5800 Kelvin. At 3000 Kelvin, most materials would be glowing red-hot or even white-hot depending on their composition.
The answer is 5526.85 C (approx.). The Kelvin scale starts at absolute zero and is used in scientific laboratories. Celsius is for general use and set 0 and 100 as melting and boiling point of water respectively. To convert from K to C, subtract 273.15 from K.
We call the core of the sun as photo sphere. Its temperature is 14 million kelvin. Where as the outer atmosphere is comparatively cooler with temperature 6000 kelvin. It is named as chroma sphere.
5,778 degrees Celsius.:]-------------------------------------------------------------------From Rafaelrz.It should say; 5,778 Kelvin (Thermodynamic Temperature).
>> the hottest laser beam is about 1000 degrees Celsius (1832 F) Technically a laser beam doesn't have a temperature since it is made of photons and not matter. Temperature is related to the average vibrational energy of the atoms in a chunk of matter. No vibrating atoms means temperature can't be measured. However a laser beam of the right frequency can easily heat something up far hotter 1000 C. Laser beams routinely vaporize steel, which boils at 3000 C (5432 F), and tungsten which boils at over 5550 C (10022 F). This approaches the surface temperature of the Sun, 5800 C or 10472 F. The biggest laser in the world, actually 192 lasers all focused on the same spot, is at the National Ignition Facility in Livermore California. They recently dumped 1 Megajoule of energy into a target a few mm across over a period of a few nanoseconds. They are shooting for temperatures of 200,000,000 F (111,111,093 C) in order to induce nuclear fusion in a frozen hydrogen pellet. So I you could say that the hottest laser in the world can produce temperatures of around 111,000,000 C or 200,000,000 F which is about 7 times the temperatures estimated for the inside of the Sun; 30,000,000 F or 16,666,648.9 C.
5800 kelvin = 9,980.33 degrees Fahrenheit.
A temperature of 3000 degrees Kelvin is quite hot. For reference, the surface of the sun is around 5800 Kelvin. At 3000 Kelvin, most materials would be glowing red-hot or even white-hot depending on their composition.
The answer is 5526.85 C (approx.). The Kelvin scale starts at absolute zero and is used in scientific laboratories. Celsius is for general use and set 0 and 100 as melting and boiling point of water respectively. To convert from K to C, subtract 273.15 from K.
The Sun is about the same temperature all year 'round, that is, 15.7 million degrees Kelvin on the interior, and about 5800 million degrees Kelvin on its surface.
Oxygen Acetylene torch will get to 5800-6300 degrees Fahrenheit easily.
The average temperature of the sun is around 5800 Kelvin.
5800 K refers to a color temperature measurement in Kelvin, indicating the color appearance of a light source. A 5800 K light source is a cooler, bluish-white light commonly associated with midday sunlight or electronic screens.
5800 cm
The surface of the Sun (the photosphere) is about 5500° Celsius (~5800°Kelvin). The corona (outer atmosphere) has a much higher "temperature", in the millions of degrees, but it is so comparatively tenuous that the effective heat energy is very much less.
There are 3 feet in one yard. Therefore, 5800 feet is equal to 5800/3 = 1933.3 recurring (that is, 1933.3333...) yards.
To find 10 percent of a number, multiply the number by 0.1. In this instance, 0.1 x 5800 = 580. Therefore, 10 percent of 5800 is equal to 580.
There are 5800 grams in 5.8 kg since 1 kg is equal to 1000 grams.