11,000 degrees on surface and 27,000,000 degrees in core
The sun facing half is heated by the Sun, so it is hot. The half facing away form the Sun is in shadow so this half is cool.
Bloody hot in the day and hot at night
The sun does not shine in the night. The full moon reflects sunlight to the Earth at night.
hot
No one the sun is too hot!!!
The surface of the sun is about 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit. Whether it is day or night does not affect this. Day and night are merely caused by Earth's rotation, which has no effect on the sun.
It is always hot on the sun because it is a massive ball of burning gases undergoing nuclear reactions that produce intense heat and light. There is no "night" on the sun as it constantly emits energy.
It is still hot at night because the Earth retains heat from the sun during the day, and this heat is slowly released into the atmosphere at night, keeping temperatures elevated.
No the sun is a power source witch will eventually burn out the sun does not spin so it cant ever be turning away from something By Jamie Harper The hot gas in the sun IS spinning but all the surface is very very hot and shining all the while so there is no "night".
the sun has just gone down and the clouds are moving in
because the sun shines directly on to the planet, during the day. But in the night it gets no sun, therefor no heat!
No, because at night the Sun is hidden. But the Sun's brightness prevents stars being seen in the daytime.
It is always much colder at night than in the day because what makes the earth hot is energy from the suns rays. If the sun isn't there, it won't be as hot.
Mercury is the hottest planet, because it is the closest planet to the sun.
the sun is as hot as burning fire
An African Savanna is hot in the day and cold at night because in the day, the sun heats up the earth, and Africa is at the equator, where the sun has a smaller area to heat, so it is extremely hot. But at night, it is extremely cold because there are no clouds to keep the heat in, so the heat just escapes. Think of the clouds as a blanket over the world. No blanket, no heat.
During the day, the surface of the sun can reach temperatures of around 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit. At nighttime, the sun's temperature doesn't suddenly drop; it remains incredibly hot due to its internal nuclear reactions, with temperatures over 9,900 degrees Fahrenheit on average.