I’m a Scientist is like school science lessons meet the X Factor! School students choose which scientist gets a prize of $1000 to communicate their work.
Scientists and students talk on this website. They both break down barriers, have fun and learn. But only the students get to vote.
This zone is the Organs Zone. It has scientists studying health and disease in various parts ย of our bodies. Who gets the prize? YOU decide!
Well, theoretically it is possible to get a temperature hot enough, but it would probably not melt, but cook like a piece of meat…
And it’s unlikely that a day would be that hot on earth in the near future… Luckily for us!!! ๐
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I guess if you dropped someone on the sun, they’d evaporate pretty quickly… But not likely here on earth. ๐
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No. You wouldn’t evaporate, more cook (imagine microwave)
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Dear Pommypomtom
Do you live on Earth? If so, I believe that days don’t naturally get hot enough even to boil you (this occurs at 100 degrees). If you live on the planet Venus the extreme greenhouse effect on that planet would definitely cook you at a temperature of around 480 degrees as this temperature is way too hot for water to remain in liquid form but probably not hot enough to fully evaporate your bones which requires around 760 to 1150 degrees as used in crematoriums. However, if you live on the surface of the sun where the temperature gets to around 6000 degrees you would be burned to dust in less than a second.
However, if a nuclear bomb dropped somewhere close to you, the temperature would rapidly climb to several million degrees which would evaporate you and everyone around you as well as creating some interesting new minerals. This unfortunately happened during the Second World War when two nuclear bombs were dropped on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
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