The distance a planet is from the Sun determines how much solar radiation is receives. Planets that are further receive less and thus are often colder. That is unless their atmospheres trap the energy received from the Sun. This is the case with Venus, which is the hottest planet in the solar system due to its thick atmosphere and runaway greenhouse affect.
The temperature of a planet varies with the distance from the sun because the sun is hot and the closer something is to the sun, the hotter the object gets. The further away the planet from the sun, the colder the planet.
In general the temperature of a planet falls with distance from the sun. However, Venus is nearly 90% further from the sun than Mercury but, instead of being cooler, Venus is 40% hotter.
In general terms, the surface temperature of a planet decreases as its distance from the sun increases. However, Venus is approx 90% further from the sun than Mercury. But, instead of the temperature being lower, it is approx 40% higher.
The temperature of a planet varies with the distance from the sun because the sun is hot and the closer something is to the sun, the hotter the object gets. The further away the planet from the sun, the colder the planet.
The distance varies very little so the temperature change is small, probably too small to be measured at present.
The temperature of a planet varies with the distance from the sun because the sun is hot and the closer something is to the sun, the hotter the object gets. The further away the planet from the sun, the colder the planet.
The temperature of a planet varies with the distance from the sun because the sun is hot and the closer something is to the sun, the hotter the object gets. The further away the planet from the sun, the colder the planet.
The further away a planet is from the sun the colder it is, the closer a planet is the hotter the planet is.
The temperature of a planet varies with the distance from the sun because the sun is hot and the closer something is to the sun, the hotter the object gets. The further away the planet from the sun, the colder the planet.
Roughly speaking, as you go farther away from the Sun, planets get colder.
In general the temperature of a planet falls with distance from the sun. However, Venus is nearly 90% further from the sun than Mercury but, instead of being cooler, Venus is 40% hotter.
In general terms, the surface temperature of a planet decreases as its distance from the sun increases. However, Venus is approx 90% further from the sun than Mercury. But, instead of the temperature being lower, it is approx 40% higher.
The temperature of a planet varies with the distance from the sun because the sun is hot and the closer something is to the sun, the hotter the object gets. The further away the planet from the sun, the colder the planet.
The distance varies very little so the temperature change is small, probably too small to be measured at present.
The distance varies very little so the temperature change is small, probably too small to be measured at present.
The temperature of Venus does not vary significantly with distance from the sun due to its thick atmosphere that traps heat. Venus experiences extreme greenhouse effect that maintains high surface temperatures regardless of distance from the sun.
VERY ROUGHLY, as you get farther away form the Sun, the temperatures decrease.