Sentences with phrase «millions of degrees hot»

You just have to remember that what feels hot on your skin and is boiling you up inside is invisible heat radiating out from the massive millions and millions of degrees hot Star in the sky we call The Sun.
The Greenhouse Effect is an impossible world with its Sun a cold Star of 6000 °C, around the temp of Earth's innards, but they have a good reason for this science fraud — to eliminate the direct radiant heat from our real millions of degrees hot real Star our Sun, so they can then pretend all real world measurements downwelling are from «the atmosphere backradiating by greenhouse gases», and not from the Sun.
One enduring mystery is why the corona is millions of degrees hotter than the surface of the sun, which is a relatively balmy 5,500 ° Celsius.
Scientists hope that the probe will help solve some crucial mysteries about the sun: How can the corona (the outer layer of the sun's atmosphere) be millions of degrees hotter than the solar surface?
«It's exciting because it explains why the solar atmosphere is millions of degrees hotter than the surface,» said De Pontieu.

Not exact matches

Huge densities and temperatures (millions of degrees, hotter even than the Sun's core) are required to overcome the electrostatic repulsion between the positively charged nuclei involved.
It has been hot here, but every time I think that it's too hot to go outside I stop and reflect on how I will feel 6 months from now when it is ten million degrees below zero and nine feet of snow.
But a feeding black hole is surrounded by a whirling, white - hot disk of glowing debris — material heated to millions of degrees as it spirals down to oblivion.
Taken with the orbiting Chandra Observatory, it shows the hottest, most violent objects in the galaxy: black holes gobbling down matter, gas heated to millions of degrees by dense, whirling neutron stars, and the high - energy radiation from stars that have exploded, sending out vast amounts of material that slam into surrounding gas, creating shock waves that heat the gas tremendously, generating X-rays.
2 Hotter The comet is hotter than the center of the sun, measuring a scorching 83 million degrees FahreHotter The comet is hotter than the center of the sun, measuring a scorching 83 million degrees Fahrehotter than the center of the sun, measuring a scorching 83 million degrees Fahrenheit.
THE sun's million - degree outer atmosphere is the last place you would expect to find rain, yet a form of the stuff could help explain why the sun's outer atmosphere, or corona, is much hotter than you might expect.
«The temperature of the plasma is around 200 million degrees,» Olson says modestly, «several times hotter than the core of the sun.»
Physicists believe that by the time the universe was just 10 - 33 of a second old (that's a millionth of a billionth of a billionth of a billionth of a second), the temperature had dropped from unimaginably hot to a mere 18 million billion billion degrees.
As an example of the use of the model, the core of the plasma inside the seven - story ITER tokamak, the international fusion experiment under construction in France, will have to be more than 10 times hotter than the core of the sun, whose temperature is 15 million degrees Celsius.
IRIS does not observe the hottest coronal plasma in these loops, which can reach temperatures of several million degrees.
Coronal loops are giant magnetic arches filled with hot plasma at temperatures of over a million degrees Celsius.
But the black holes in the Whirlpool have temperatures of less than 4 million degrees Celsius, indicating that the clouds of hot gas swirling around them are bigger and more spread out.
The remarkable feat also poses a new puzzle: In two cases, million - degree «hot spots» on the stars» surfaces turn out to be much larger than expected, indicating that popular models of neutron stars are wrong.
FOXSI detected a type of light called hard X-rays — whose wavelengths are much shorter than the light humans can see — which is a signature of extremely hot solar material, around 18 million degrees Fahrenheit.
Since the operating temperature for fusion is in the hundreds of millions degrees Celsius, hotter than any known material can withstand, engineers found they could contain a plasma — a neutral electrically conductive, high - energy state of matter — at these temperatures using magnetic fields.
Unfortunately, at a temperature of just a few million degrees (much cooler than the extremely hot gas in galaxy clusters), it is extremely hard to detect.
I read that the sun's surface temperature is about 6,000 degrees Celsius but that the corona — the sun's atmosphere — is much hotter, millions of degrees.
Up to a trillion high - energy photons, moving in unison, sweep through the matter, heating it to more than one million degrees Celsius — hot as the solar corona — in less than a trillionth of a second.
If the ions collide with enough force, they fuse, converting some of their mass into energy, but this requires temperatures of at least 100 million degrees Celsius with conventional fuel, hot enough to melt any container.
These are impulsive heating bursts that individually reach incredibly hot temperatures of some 10 million Kelvins or 18 million degrees Fahrenheit - even greater than the average temperature of the corona - and provide heat to the atmosphere.
These gigantic stars would have had surface temperatures of millions of degrees, making them not red - hot or blue - hot, but hot enough to produce gamma rays, the most energetic form of light.
Closer to home, I suppose I left out the sun, which of course, itself is mostly plasma, because [the] high - temperature center of the sun is 15 million degrees, and so that is plenty hot enough to separate the electrons and the protons and to make sure that they move around freely inside the center of the sun.
At its peak, the flare reached temperatures of 360 million degrees Fahrenheit (200 million Celsius), more than 12 times hotter than the center of the sun.
They focused on the hot, 10 - million - degree gas that fills the spaces between galaxies and found the spectroscopic signature of iron reaching all the way to the cluster's edges.
Scientists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the University of Cambridge and some other international institutions investigating this «extreme stellar output» observed jets of hot plasma and gas bubbles (at about 10 million degrees) blasting out from the galaxy's central black hole.
The moss consists of hot gas at about two million degrees Fahrenheit which emits extreme ultraviolet light observed by the TRACE instrument.
Solar moss consists of hot gas at about two million degrees Fahrenheit which emits extreme ultraviolet light observed by the TRACE instrument.
«If you heated up a pot of water, no matter how hot, even if you vaporized it at a million degrees, it would still not be as hot as the electrons in the laser.»
Colored according to x-ray energy intensity, this supernova remnant's bluish shockwave bubble is twice as hot as the mottled gaseous debris expanding behind at 10 million degrees Celsius (more at Astronomy Picture of the Day and CXC).
Fox and Fiksel used two very powerful lasers to zap two tiny pieces of plastic in a vacuum chamber to 10 million degrees and create two colliding plumes of extremely hot plasma.
Stars are enormous celestial bodies hot enough to register millions of degrees.
«I love telling mind - blowing facts, like every time we do a shot at NIF, we are one of the hottest places in the solar system,» said experimental plasma physicist Tammy Ma (NIF implosions reach peak temperatures of more than 100 million degrees Centigrade — more than five times hotter than the core of the Sun).
When it's a million degrees outside, my chances of being a hot mess multiply.
Anyway, as I said, you are all so brainwashed by these AGWSF sleights of hand that you actually believe that our blazing hot Star the Sun millions of degrees C hot, doesn't give off any heat!
In addition to the conservation farming practices that emphasis soil CO2 restoration, the ~ 12 million kilometers squared of land that have been severely degraded tend to have greater than 2C degrees higher soil temperatures, deserts tend to get hot.
On Friday, the 24 - million - plus inhabitants of Shanghai witnessed the temperature skyrocket to 105.6 degrees (40.9 Celsius), its hottest day ever recorded.
Good catch, Peter, and with plate tectonics causing an increased uplift in the Himalayas, that 5ºC could very well be on the low side — the sun is «way hotter than the inside of the Earth, and it's millions of degrees down there!
another interesting aspect of this is that there are hot and cold periods over the past 500 million years....10 to 15 degree swings.
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