Yes, it would, after all a diamond is just compressed carbon heated up to form a crystal.
The seas would rise.
Diamonds are the hardest known natural material (from Carbon) and with a melting point of over 3500`c it would be pretty much impossible to melt one down. Only another diamond can scratch a diamond but it wont melt it.
It would be transformed into opaque black carbon. You don't even need the sun to burn up a diamond, an oxy-acetylene torch will destroy it. ------ No. But it will become something else for sure. it may just vaporize before even reaching its destination.
no
You would start to melt at around 4,400 miles above the Sun's surface, reaching temperatures of over 9,930 degrees Fahrenheit. As you got closer, you would eventually vaporize due to the extreme heat, radiation, and solar winds.
it's is impossible for earth to melt but if we were 20,000,000 miles closer the earth would not melt but the oceans would evaporate.
No, not if the diamond is on earth, and not closer to the sun.
The melting point of diamond is sufficiently high that magma would not melt it.
The earth would be attracted by the sun, and as it came closer the sun, the earth would melt. The earth would probably collide with the sun before or after it would melt.
a diamond's melting point is so highmagma will not melt it
unfortunately it cannot be done. The centre of the earth is so extremely hot that even rocks melt, and under its also under humungous pressure. The best way to get to the other side of the earth would probably be to fly
No more than any other substance would. It also depends on the temperature of the diamond, as is would for any object.
well yes because the inner core is REALLY hot so prob yes
Well first of all, the Earth would never melt, because in order for the earth to melt there a has to be a huge amount of heat (energy), and it has to be balanced (meaning kept on a same temperature) that way the earth can melt, like ice. But in most of the cases when a planet gets to hot, (no living organisms on the planet anymore) instead of melting it would explode, because the heat is not constant, therefore no melting point would exist
The seas would rise.
No, the Earth will not melt at 120 degrees Fahrenheit. While temperatures that high can be very uncomfortable and may have negative impacts on living organisms and ecosystems, the Earth's rocks and minerals would not melt at this temperature.
The earth will melt