if you went by a plane travelling at 250 mph it would 2hours and 30 minutes.
The outer planets take longer.
The lithosphere lies above the asthenosphere. The asthenosphere is where isostatic adjustments take place and it is a very ductile region. Seismic waves pass slower through this region of the earth than they do through the overlying lithosphere.
Inner planets (up until Mars): - are mostly composed of dense rocky material with high melting points; - have small diameters; - have high tempeatures; - take few time to make a complete turn around the sun; - have few or no moons; - all have impact cracters; Outer planets: - are mostly composed of gases; - have very large diameters (compared to the inner planets); - have low temperatures; - take a long time to make a complete turn around the sun; - generally have several moons; - no impact craters known (so far since no one as made it to the rocky core of these planets).
If you are asking where does solar nuclear fusion take place, then that would be at the core of stars.
The process of plate separation and lithosphere formation typically takes place at mid-ocean ridges, where tectonic plates are moving away from each other due to seafloor spreading. As the plates diverge, magma rises from the mantle to create new oceanic crust, which solidifies to form the lithosphere.
how long does it take to install a heater core in a 2000 dodge neon
About 2,000,000
it would take you 300 days to dig all the way down to the core
Inner planets differ from outer planets because they have rocky core (excepting Pluto), and the are much smaller than outer planets, which are bigger and take more time to orbit Sun than inner planets because of their location. Outer planets are farther from the Sun than inner planets.
The outer planets take longer.
It would be necessary to know at what speed you intend to travel through the outer core.
1 to 2 months depending on conditions.
It depends on ocean currents, air pressure, and weather. But 40 miles from Cuba to Miami on inner tube could take a day or two.
No, that is just a little above the surface temp. of Venus; enough to melt lead. Earth's inner and outer core is a searing 10,832 Fahrenheit, give or take about 930 degrees, at a pressure of 3.3 million atmospheres (or 3.3 million times the atmospheric pressure at sea level.
for my scientififc research I have learned htat I have no clue :)
No, that is just a little above the surface temp. of Venus; enough to melt lead. Earth's inner and outer core is a searing 10,832 Fahrenheit, give or take about 930 degrees, at a pressure of 3.3 million atmospheres (or 3.3 million times the atmospheric pressure at sea level.
No, the crust is the very thinnest layer of the Earth. The mantle is the largest layer of the Earth if you take the core to be separated into the inner and outer zones.