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2007-03-23 19:25:27 · 17 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

17 answers

Hey, not only just "realy hot", but like REALLY, REALLY, REALLY! hot.

2007-03-23 21:42:40 · answer #1 · answered by stargazergurl22 4 · 0 0

No, the sun has nothing to do with heat. Heat comes from the color of the sky. For instance, when the sky is blue, heat is released from the air molecules. When the sky is black, heat is not released. That is why it is hot when it is "daytime" and colder when it is "nighttime". People only associate heat with the sun because you can only see the sun when it is daytime, and not when it is nighttime. The sun is only a bright orange disk in the sky that goes back and forth. During the day, the sun moves from east to west. But at night, it stops, changes direction, and moves back from the west towards the east. Because it is dark at night, people cannot see the sun moving back towards the east. That is why some people actually think that the sun moves only in an east to west motion. Hence the hoccus poccus theory that the earth revolves around the sun. If you shine a flashlight into the night sky, you can actually see the sun moving from west to east. Scientists know this, but most refuse to admit it in fear that their reputations will be ruined. Most people are not quite ready to accept this shift in paradigm. Old theories die hard. I hope this helps.

2007-03-23 22:06:46 · answer #2 · answered by Chris 3 · 0 1

you're from Australia appropriate? i know what you advise because of the fact I unquestionably have a youthful bub too. the baths are an rather good theory and trickle water over him, get a face cloth and moist it, placed it in the freezer for slightly and gently run it over the back of his neck. If he's began solids get some Heinz pear or apples and placed it in ice dice trays, enable him suck on them. you may ought to hold it, inspite of the undeniable fact that, I unquestionably have some thing I introduced from the food market or you will get from Kmart. It sounds like an ice pole inspite of the undeniable fact that it rather is mesh on the suitable and a teething ring on the backside, they are able to't chew for the time of the mesh yet you may placed some thing chilly/frozen in it and enable him suck. damn it could have been good IF I examine IT top, SORRY approximately THAT i assumed HE replaced into 6 MONTHS old it rather is WHY i discussed THE SOLIDS. BTW we are IN MELBOURNE TOO, I stay in the eastern SUBURBS. i'm hoping i've got helped a sprint :)

2016-10-19 12:01:41 · answer #3 · answered by arleta 4 · 0 0

It's not really as hot as we sometimes think. We don't feel warm because the sun is hot- if that was true, things would get hotter the higher we go- with is opposite of what happens. It'll burn you, but when a meteor hits- it creates about 10 times more heat than the sun.

2007-03-23 19:59:03 · answer #4 · answered by locusfire 5 · 0 2

Here are the temperatures for all the layers within the sun --

Center -- 27-million degrees
Convective zone -- about 7-million degrees
Photosphere -- 10,300 degrees
Chromosphere -- 22,900 degrees
Corona -- 2-million degrees

Looks kinda hot to me, but then everything is relative : )

2007-03-23 20:00:41 · answer #5 · answered by Chug-a-Lug 7 · 2 0

Surface temperature 6000 degrees, Absolute, or Kelvin; 5700 degrees Centigrade, or Celsius. Interior temperature 15,000,000 degrees Absolute.

2007-03-23 23:42:32 · answer #6 · answered by CLICKHEREx 5 · 0 0

It is so hot as to make the girls want to take their clothes off.
Sorry, I heard that on a song and the little ditty is just catchy. Because it is getting hot in here, and I I do want to take my clothes off.
Hey, thinks Nelly, or what ever your name is you little singer, rapper, dude you.
B

2007-03-24 02:10:55 · answer #7 · answered by Bacchus 5 · 1 0

Yes, it really, really is hot. Stand outside on a hot summer day - feel the sunlight - is it hot? Of course it is!

2007-03-23 19:29:20 · answer #8 · answered by lyllyan 6 · 0 0

depends on your definition of hot, really. Compared to a blue-plasma star, such as Rigel, our sun is a Sissy.

Compared to Deneb, the most luminous star in the known universe, our sun is a mouse fart.

2007-03-23 20:25:27 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

yes...about 5,000 degrees Celsius

2007-03-23 19:29:32 · answer #10 · answered by Neil R 2 · 0 0

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