A white main sequence star has the hottest core.
Not sure which part is which but some of them are: oxidizing reducing Not sure which part is which but some of them are: oxidizing reducing
Inner core, which is also the innermost region of the Earth.
The inner core has the most or highest amount of density (iron/nickel).
Let's get to the core of the matter. The core of the Earth is supposed to be molten. To prepare the dish, you first have to core several apples.
The Earth has 5 layers start from the deepest: Inner core, outer core, inner mantle, outer mantle, crust.
The hottest thing "in the world"? That lets out stars or anything else off-world, so probably the core of the Earth.
No, a red supergiant does not have the hottest core. Instead, blue supergiant stars have the hottest cores, with temperatures reaching up to tens of thousands of degrees Kelvin. Red supergiants have cooler cores in comparison.
blue stars are the hottest stars.
the sun's core is the hottest part of the sun
In it's core where the temperatures exceeds 15,000,000 Kelvin
The hottest stars are supernova explosions, which may reach temperatures around a billion kelvin in the star's core.
No the inner core (or the magma) is the hottest layer of the earth
Hot bright stars do not live very long because they are big (have a lot of mass) and their core density means that they use up their fuel quickly and die young (in supernova explosions). This means you find the hottest brightest stars in star forming regions, stellar nurseries.
The hottest region of the sun is the core.
the core
The hottest star is called O-type blue stars. They have surface temperatures of around 30,000-60,000 degrees Celsius.
Yes, the hottest stars are blue in color. Stars emit light across a range of colors, and the color of a star depends on its temperature. Blue stars are among the hottest, with surface temperatures exceeding 30,000 Kelvin.