Space itself doesn't have a specific temperature or degree measurement, as it is a near-perfect vacuum with varying temperatures depending on the location. In the vastness of space, regions can be extremely cold, such as the cosmic microwave background radiation, which is about 2.7 Kelvin, equivalent to -270.45 degrees Celsius. However, temperatures can vary widely based on proximity to stars or other heat sources, with some areas being much hotter.
In an equilateral trianger, each angle is 60 degrees. In all triangles, including equilateral triangles, all 3 angles add up to 180 degrees.(the above assumes Euclidean - flat - space. In Hyperbolic space there are less than 180° in all triangles; in Spherical space more than 180° in all triangles)
A point in 3D space has three degrees of freedom. These degrees of freedom correspond to the three spatial dimensions: movement along the x, y, and z axes. Consequently, a point can be freely positioned anywhere within the three-dimensional space by varying its coordinates.
Not sure how much the sun moves through space - about the centre of the Milky Way Galaxy. The earth rotates through 0.25 degrees in a minute so the sun APPEARS to move 0.25 degrees.
An angle.
None. A degree is a measure of angular separation in 1-dimensional space, a steradian is a measure in 2-dimensional space. It makes no sense to try to convert from one to the other.
180 degrees all triangles have 180 degrees.(the above assumes Euclidean - flat - space. In Hyperbolic space there are less than 180° in all triangles; in Spherical space more than 180° in all triangles)
123 degrees
In an equilateral trianger, each angle is 60 degrees. In all triangles, including equilateral triangles, all 3 angles add up to 180 degrees.(the above assumes Euclidean - flat - space. In Hyperbolic space there are less than 180° in all triangles; in Spherical space more than 180° in all triangles)
3. 4 if it is a terminator.
Space
You go to college for many years, and get post-graduate degrees in a field of science in which you are interested.
below at least -500 degrees
-270 Celsius
The temperature in space around Earth can vary widely, but on average it is about 2.7 Kelvin (-454.8 degrees Fahrenheit or -270.4 degrees Celsius).
Not sure how much the sun moves through space - about the centre of the Milky Way Galaxy. The earth rotates through 0.25 degrees in a minute so the sun APPEARS to move 0.25 degrees.
None. A degree is a measure of angular separation in 1-dimensional space, a steradian is a measure in 2-dimensional space. It makes no sense to try to convert from one to the other.
space suits can withstand minus 250 to 250 degrees fahrenheit