Yup, what those guys said (not D.Wade)... Hey man, love your show...!
1EM
2007-10-17 19:22:20
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answer #1
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answered by one_e_man 3
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Yes. Obviously if you're next to a star, it's warmer than if you're not.
But the interesting thing is that deep space has a uniform (not quite, but very close) temperature of 3K.
It's the leftover heat from the Big Bang, the "microwave background radiation". It was predicted by a scientist in the 1930s as the proof of the Big Bang. The guys who found it in the 1950s won the Nobel Prize.
The tiny variations I mentioned above are what caused the stars to form. Their discovery in the 1990s (they were found to be exactly as predicted by Big Bang theory) was the final proof that the Big Bang did occur.
2007-10-18 02:19:29
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answer #2
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answered by Bob 7
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Depending on how you interpret that question, the answer could be:
No, it doesn't
or
Yes, 281 degrees Kelvin
or
Yes, 3 degrees Kelvin
You could make a good case for each of those 3 answers being right.
2007-10-18 02:24:46
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answer #3
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answered by dogwood_lock 5
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Out of sunlight, the temperature is 3° K
2007-10-18 02:20:03
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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if you were working on the space station, there would be 2 different tempertures. if your in shade, it can be -150 F and if your in sun light it can be 250 F
2007-10-18 21:53:19
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answer #5
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answered by dragoncbv1 2
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cold and really freaking cold
stars kinda warm things up within a few hundred millions of them (growing in proportion to their size)
2007-10-18 02:24:51
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answer #6
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answered by Mercury 2010 7
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there is no atmosphere like on earth so there is nothing to hold warm air and it is very cold in space
2007-10-18 03:09:15
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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temperature is a measure of how hot or cold a place or thing is.
2007-10-18 02:20:20
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answer #8
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answered by D.Wade 2
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