Approx 295 Celsius degrees.
Mercury's average temperature in Fahrenheit is 800 degrees.
Different types of thermometer have to be used in different circumstances, for example the thermometer you stick in your mouth when you're ill would be of no use in a steam boiler or even in your oven as it would break. Mercury expands and contracts more than alcohol so it can show a greater range of temperatures.
A barometer measures air pressure. A mercury one does so by taking a tube full of mercury which is inverted into a dish of mercury. The height of mercury remaining in the tube is a measure of the air pressure.
If you mean by an "ordinary" thermometer, a mercury thermometer, the bimetallic type can measure a far greater range of temperature (mercury freezes at -38oC and boils at 356oC making it useless in the polar regions or for measuring high temperatures).Bimetallic thermometers are also more robust; mercury thermometers are usually made from glass and are fragile.
Pure mercury will exhibit superconductivity at 4.2 degrees Kelvin. It was the first superconductive material that H. Kamerlingh Onnes found in 1911.
Mars is not hot, its average temperature is well below freezing.Mars varies between low temperatures of about -87 oC to highs of about -5 oCThis compares to Mercury which averages about 106 oC
VERY COLD! Mercury has no atmosphere to retain the heat, so on the side not facing the Sun, it can get down to like, -270 degrees Fahrenheit
The fact that its daytime and nighttime temperatures vary between -183C and +427C.
Sun to Mercury's orbit = 57,909,175 km or 35,983,093 miles (0.387 AU) on average Sun to Earth's orbit = 149,597,890 or 92,955,820 miles (1.00AU) Mercury's orbit to Earth's orbit = 91,688,715 km or 56,972,727 miles (0.613 AU) on average. The actual distance between Mercury and Earth will vary a lot though as they are in different orbits.
For the planets Mercury and Mars, their maximum and minimum temperatures are listed:* Mercury (minimum = -184 °C; maximum = 465 °C) * Venus (average = 449 °C)* Earth (average = 7.2 °C)* Mars (minimum = -123 °C; maximum = 36 °C)* Jupiter (average = -153 °C)
The orbits of Mercury and Venus are between the sun and the orbit of Earth. That is different from saying that Mercury and Venus are between the sun and Earth, which is often not true.
Different metals melt at different temperatures, from -39 deg C (mercury) to 3414 deg C (tungsten).
The distance between Mercury and Uranus varies as they both orbit the Sun at different distances. On average, the distance between Mercury and Uranus is approximately 2.7 billion miles (4.3 billion kilometers). However, this distance can change significantly due to their elliptical orbits.
There are two main similarities between Mercury and Pluto. One is their smaller sizes, although Pluto is far smaller than Mercury. The other is their extreme distance from the sun. So Mercury is the closest known planet to the sun while Pluto was considered the furthest.
About 92 AU on average.
mercury is a crater planet like the moon.it has no moons changes different temperatures in the morning and night if you need more help check google
Mercury is a very hot planet. Mercury is the closest planet to the sun.