The Earth's core is aboutthe same temperature as thesurface (photosphere) of the Sun. That temperature is around 5,500 Celsius.
Bear in mind that there is still some uncertainty in the estimated temperature of the Earth's core.
(Recent work suggests the Earth's core may be hotter than previous estimates.)
Note that the Sun does not have a uniform temperature.
It varies tremendously, from the core out to the "corona".
The Sun's core is much hotter than the Earth's core.
The sun is millions of degrees hotter than the earths core! (:
Surface of the sun is hotter.
The outer core is liquid. Its pressure is low enough and its temperature high enough for it to melt. The inner core is solid. Both its pressure and temperature are higher than the outer core, but the increased pressure overwhelms the increased temperature, keeping the inner core from melting.
The surface of the sun is hotter than the core of the Earth. The surface of the sun can reach temperatures of about 5,500 degrees Celsius, while the core of the Earth has temperatures reaching up to 6,000 degrees Celsius.
The surface of the sun is hotter than the center of the earth. The core of the sun reaches temperatures of up to 27 million degrees Fahrenheit, while the Earth's inner core is estimated to be around 10,800 degrees Fahrenheit.
The sun is millions of degrees hotter than the earths core! (:
The Earth's core is aboutthe same temperature as thesurface (photosphere) of the Sun. That temperature is around 5,500 Celsius.Bear in mind that there is still some uncertainty in the estimated temperature of the Earth's core.(Recent work suggests the Earth's core may be hotter than previous estimates.)Note that the Sun does not have a uniform temperature.It varies tremendously, from the core out to the "corona".The Sun's core is much hotter than the Earth's core.
The Earth's core is aboutthe same temperature as thesurface (photosphere) of the Sun. That temperature is around 5,500 Celsius.Bear in mind that there is still some uncertainty in the estimated temperature of the Earth's core.(Recent work suggests the Earth's core may be hotter than previous estimates.)Note that the Sun does not have a uniform temperature.It varies tremendously, from the core out to the "corona".The Sun's core is much hotter than the Earth's core.
No it is not, however it is similar to that of the sun's surface
The sun.
Surface of the sun is hotter.
Supposedly, the Earth's core is hotter than the surface of the Sun.So, IF the two collided, the material of the Earth's core would make the Sun hotter, at least until or as the material is burned or converted into the Sun's energy. In this theory, only 1 Earth would make the Sun hotter.
The outer core is liquid. Its pressure is low enough and its temperature high enough for it to melt. The inner core is solid. Both its pressure and temperature are higher than the outer core, but the increased pressure overwhelms the increased temperature, keeping the inner core from melting.
The surface of the sun is hotter than the core of the Earth. The surface of the sun can reach temperatures of about 5,500 degrees Celsius, while the core of the Earth has temperatures reaching up to 6,000 degrees Celsius.
The surface of the sun is hotter than the center of the earth. The core of the sun reaches temperatures of up to 27 million degrees Fahrenheit, while the Earth's inner core is estimated to be around 10,800 degrees Fahrenheit.
No, the Sun, even the coolest part of the surface, is still hotter than the Earth's core. But the core is close: as high as 5500 degrees Celsius (9900 °F), compared to about 5800-6000 °C for the photosphere of the Sun. (The core is hotter than sunspots, which range from 2700°C to about 4200°C.)
The surface of the sun is hotter than the center of the Earth. The sun's surface temperature is about 5,500 degrees Celsius, while the Earth's core temperature is estimated to be around 6,000 degrees Celsius.