No. It is much hotter. The hottest magmas inside of volcanoes may be about 1200 degrees Celsius. The cooler layer of the sun has a temperature of around 6,000 degrees Celsius with the core reaching 15 million degrees.
No, That isn't possible. The sun is hotter than anything that exists. Apart from the new sun they have discovered. That is like 100 times hotter. But I am sure the answer is no.
I hope I helped. :)
Yes. If you consider that most wood fires (most common fire on the surface of earth) run from 150oF to 2000oF and the surface of the sun is about 10k oF: it's burning hydrogen to release energy when the hydrogen joins to make helium; a highly efficient process when gravity is smashing parts together.
No, the Sun is just a very ordinary star that just happens to be much closer to us than all the other stars.
Answer:
The temperature of stars is generally related to their colour. The red dwarf stars have a surface temperature of less than 3,500 Kelvin. Our own Sun is a yellow dwarf star. It has a surface temperature of about 5,800 Kelvin. The hottest stars are the blue stars. They have temperatures from about 10,000 Kelvin to more than 40,000 Kelvin.
Yes the sun is hotter than than magma even on its surface.
Yes, the sun is hotter than fire. At the sun's core it can reach up to 27 million degrees Fahrenheit.
yes a lot hotter
A volcano formed by a rising plume of magma that is not located at a plate boundary.
it is a magma flow that comes from the center of the volcano
at least 180 degrees celcius
inside a shield volcano is a hot surface of mamga
Usually basaltic magma and hot hydrothermal fluids.
the magma is hot molten rock inside the volcano.
Lava or Magma.
magma
A volcano formed by a rising plume of magma that is not located at a plate boundary.
at least 180 degrees celcius
Magma is essentially molten (very hot) rock.
it is a magma flow that comes from the center of the volcano
inside a shield volcano is a hot surface of mamga
lower magma reserves or the volcano tube has closed/shifted.
Magma from a volcano.
Usually basaltic magma and hot hydrothermal fluids.
Over time the magma chamber found inside volcanos is cut off from the mantle by tectonic plate movement. Without constant exchange of hot magma from the mantel to replace the colder magma in the volcano, (convection), the magma inside the volcano hardens into igneous rock.