The average temperature on Neptune is -353°F (-214°C)
the Earth's surface temperature even in the remotest places, and so far the hottest surface temperature ever recorded was 159.3°F in Iran's Lut Desert in 2005
This is the hottest tempteture recorded on earth since records began - 136F or 57.8C in libya. But in the olden days before people the world was much hotter, especially if we go back to when the earth was formed.
Earth.
The hottest temperature recorded on Mercury was around 800 degrees Fahrenheit (430 degrees Celsius). This extreme heat is due to the planet's close proximity to the sun and its lack of a significant atmosphere to regulate temperatures.
The highest temperature on Uranus is a chilling 57 kelvin [See related question]57 Kelvin = -357.07 degrees Fahrenheit57 kelvin = -216.15 degrees CelsiusSee related link for more information.
the Earth's surface temperature even in the remotest places, and so far the hottest surface temperature ever recorded was 159.3°F in Iran's Lut Desert in 2005
Venus is hottest. Next is Mercury.
This is the hottest tempteture recorded on earth since records began - 136F or 57.8C in libya. But in the olden days before people the world was much hotter, especially if we go back to when the earth was formed.
Earth.
it is Venus.
i think 184 degrees Celsius
The hottest planet in the solar system is Venus. The surface can reach 900 degrees Fahrenheit.
The hottest temperature recorded on Mercury was around 800 degrees Fahrenheit (430 degrees Celsius). This extreme heat is due to the planet's close proximity to the sun and its lack of a significant atmosphere to regulate temperatures.
The highest temperature on Uranus is a chilling 57 kelvin [See related question]57 Kelvin = -357.07 degrees Fahrenheit57 kelvin = -216.15 degrees CelsiusSee related link for more information.
The hottest (surface temperature) is Venus then, getting colder: Mercury, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune and Uranus. (In fact Neptune and Uranus are very similar in temperature.)
The hottest supergiant star is known as R136a1, located in the Large Magellanic Cloud. It has a surface temperature of around 50,000 degrees Celsius, making it one of the hottest known stars in the universe.
Jupiter, at the surface anyway. Venus has the hottest surface temperature of all the planets.