Sounds like a stupidly easy question to find out with a quick internet search, but it’s not.

I don’t want to know the average surface temperature, or the average ocean surface water temperature, or read another article about climate change.
But that’s all I found in the past hour.

I’d like to know the average temperature of all molecules that comprise earth, or a best guess scientific estimate.

  • olorin99@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    I have no exact answer but the earth’s mantle makes up approximately 84% of its volume and has temperatures ranging from 500k to 4200k. So I would estimate the average temperature to be in the upper bounds of that range.

    • morphballganon@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      So that figure is just the mantle, no core or surface? I agree it would be near the top, if not above. The heat from the core would easily offset the loss of heat from including the surface.

      • olorin99@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Yeah, the volume of earth is <1% the crust, ~84% the mantle and ~15% the core. So the surface temperature has basically no impact on average temperature.

  • ShittyBeatlesFCPres@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    One thing that might help is knowing that the crust is very thin, 1% of the Earth’s mass. The core is 15% and the Mantle is 84%. But we don’t have to be too exact — the earth’s mantle isn’t one temperature

    The Mantle ranges from 1000°C near the crust and 3700°C near the mantle. The core is starts there and gets up to 6000°C.

    So, just a simple formula weighted by mass might be:

    .84*((3700°C+1000°C)/2) + .15*((3700°C+6000°C)/2)

    Which equals 2701.5°C. That answer might be fine for a Lemmy but an academic paper would have major error bars.

    I also asked ChatGPT and Bard, out of curiosity. ChatGPT was more conservative and told me it’s hard to get anything besides a rough estimate. Bard warned about all that too but then said probably between 3000°C and 4000°C.

    So, I’d say about 3000°C. My quick and dirty little formula could easily be +/- 1000°C and fall in Bard’s range.

  • PrimarilyPrimate@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    The mean temperature of the earth is 59°(15°C). This is from NASA Science Solar System Temperatures. I don’t know if this answers your question but I gave it a shot.

  • BalabakGuy@lemmy.ml
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    10 months ago

    It’s not a stupidly easy question. It is extremely hard. Calculating the average temperature of all molecules on Earth is extremely hard due to the vast range of temperatures across different environments, from the Earth’s core to the atmosphere. Calculation isn’t the problem but collecting data is. You need to collect all the data that distributed widely on earth. Factors like altitude, latitude, and specific conditions in different regions making collecting an accurate data even harder.