The solid planets that are of rock
low to high surface temperature
Mercury - 275 °F (- 170°C) + 840 °F (- 450°C)
Venus + 870 °F (+ 465°C) + 870 °F (+ 465°C)
Earth - 129 °F (- 89°C) + 136 °F (+ 58°C)
Moon - 280 °F (- 173°C) + 260 °F (+ 127°C)
Mars - 195 °F (- 125°C) + 70 °F (+ 20°C)
others:-
Uranus (Ice planet minus 153 degrees Celsius) to minus (minus 218 C)
Neptune (minus 210 C) to (minus 220 C)
Saturn (minus 173 C) to minus (113 C).
Pluto (minus 223 C). At its coolest, temperatures can fall to (minus 233 C).
Planet (in order from sun)Average temperature in KelvinAverage temperature in 'CRanked in order of coldest to hottestMercury*340677Venus7354628 (hottest)Earth287.214.056Mars210-635Jupiter**165-1084Saturn**134-1393Uranus**76-1972Neptune**72-2011 (coldest) *This is the average temperature at the equator. Unlike the other planets Mercury has a huge range in surface temperature due to lack of atmosphere. At the equator, the surface temperature on Mercury can range from 100K (-173'C) to 700K (430'C).**temperature at the 1.0 bar pressure level
Jupiter, at the surface anyway. Venus has the hottest surface temperature of all the planets.
The temperatures of stars from hottest to coldest are blue stars, white stars, yellow stars (like our sun), orange stars, and red stars. Blue stars can have surface temperatures exceeding 30,000K, while red stars typically have surface temperatures around 3,000K.
In order, they are Venus, Mercury, Earth, Mars.
Venus is not the coldest planet in space; in fact, it is the hottest planet in our solar system. This is because of its thick atmosphere that traps heat, creating a runaway greenhouse effect. The surface temperatures on Venus can reach up to 900 degrees Fahrenheit (475 degrees Celsius).
earth
Venus is hottest. Next is Mercury.
Planet (in order from sun)Average temperature in KelvinAverage temperature in 'CRanked in order of coldest to hottestMercury*340677Venus7354628 (hottest)Earth287.214.056Mars210-635Jupiter**165-1084Saturn**134-1393Uranus**76-1972Neptune**72-2011 (coldest) *This is the average temperature at the equator. Unlike the other planets Mercury has a huge range in surface temperature due to lack of atmosphere. At the equator, the surface temperature on Mercury can range from 100K (-173'C) to 700K (430'C).**temperature at the 1.0 bar pressure level
The biggest planet in our solar system is Jupiter, the smallest planet is Mercury, the hottest planet is Venus due to its thick atmosphere trapping heat, and the coldest planet is Neptune, located farthest from the Sun.
Venus is hottest Mercury is second hottest Earth is third hottest Mars is fourth hottest Jupitar is fourth coldest Saturn is the third coldest Uranus is the second coldest Neptune is the coldest
Jupiter, at the surface anyway. Venus has the hottest surface temperature of all the planets.
The temperatures of stars from hottest to coldest are blue stars, white stars, yellow stars (like our sun), orange stars, and red stars. Blue stars can have surface temperatures exceeding 30,000K, while red stars typically have surface temperatures around 3,000K.
The three coldest planets in our solar system are Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto. These planets are located far from the Sun, resulting in extremely low temperatures that can reach as low as -224°C on Uranus, -214°C on Neptune, and -229°C on Pluto.
Exactly the same way they are aligned in the solar system. Mercury being closest to the sun is the hotest and the coldest should be Pluto. But some people say Neptune since Pluto was re-classified as a dwarf planet.
In order, they are Venus, Mercury, Earth, Mars.
Venus is not the coldest planet in space; in fact, it is the hottest planet in our solar system. This is because of its thick atmosphere that traps heat, creating a runaway greenhouse effect. The surface temperatures on Venus can reach up to 900 degrees Fahrenheit (475 degrees Celsius).
Planet (in order from sun)Average temperature in KelvinAverage temperature in 'CRanked in order of coldest to hottestMercury*340677Venus7354628 (hottest)Earth287.214.056Mars210-635Jupiter**165-1084Saturn**134-1393Uranus**76-1972Neptune**72-2011 (coldest) *This is the average temperature at the equator. Unlike the other planets Mercury has a huge range in surface temperature due to lack of atmosphere. At the equator, the surface temperature on Mercury can range from 100K (-173'C) to 700K (430'C). **temperature at the 1.0 bar pressure level