Jupiter is a very cold planet. The average temperature of Jupiter during the day is -1121 degrees Celsius. Nighttime temperatures can average -163 degrees Celsius.
165 kelvins
The average temperature of Jupiter is -110C.
A solid surface, if there is one, would be contained within Jupiter's liquid metallic hydrogen core. As LMH is super conducting fluid there would be no temperature gradient, so the answer to both of your questions would be roughly 24 000 degrees, centigrade.
Jupiter is a gaseous planet with temperatures ranging from close to absolute zero at the outermost cloud layer to an estimated 36,000° Kelvin at the core. The outer layer of the planet has an average temperature of about 390 degrees Celsius or 680 degrees Fahrenheit. The temperature in Jupiter's clouds is about -140 degrees Celsius or -220 degrees Fahrenheit. The temperature in Jupiter's core is about 24,000 degrees Celsius or 43,000 degrees Fahrenheit. !
no Jupiter is a gas planet, and has very extreme temperatures that no one could suvive
No, the planet Jupiter does not have living things. Jupiter is over 483 billion miles from the sun and the cold temperatures make life impossible.
For the planets Mercury and Mars, their maximum and minimum temperatures are listed:* Mercury (minimum = -184 °C; maximum = 465 °C) * Venus (average = 449 °C)* Earth (average = 7.2 °C)* Mars (minimum = -123 °C; maximum = 36 °C)* Jupiter (average = -153 °C)
Jupiter(: <----WRONG! It is Mercury.
No, because there is no surface to Jupiter, it is a gaseous planet with nowhere to land a spacecraft. Temperatures and pressure on Jupiter are also very extreme.
Methane does not condense into ice in the warmer atmospheric temperatures of Jupiter and Saturn.
Average temperatures in Antarctica are generally below freezing; in UK freezing temperatures are more rare on average.