The lowest recorded temperatures on Earth occur at remote locations in Siberia and Antarctica, which receive minimal solar heating and little oceanic heat transport. At the Antarctic's Vostok Station (operated by Russia), they reported in the winter of 1997 a low temperature of -91°C (-132°F), which is an unconfirmed world's record.
The same station holds the confirmed record, from July 21, 1983, a minimum temperature of -89.2°C (-128.6°F)
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The minimum temperature that is confirmed was at the Vostok Station (Antarctica) which recorded a temperature of - 89.2° Celsius (-128.6°F) on July 21, 1983.
An unconfirmed record from the same station is - 91.09°C (- 131.96°F) in 1997.
-89.2'C (-128.6'F) at the Russian Antarctic station, Vostok, in 1983.
The Australian Antarctic Territory (AAT) experienced the world's lowest temperature when -89.6 degrees Celsius (-129F) was recorded on 21st July, 1983, at Russia's Vostok Station at an elevation of 3,488 metres.
The coldest temperatures in the interior range from -400 to -940 C and on the coast -50 to -220 C.
The lowest temperature ever recorded on Earth was -128.6 degrees Fahrenheit (-89.2 degrees Celsius) at the Soviet Union's Vostok Station in Antarctica on July 21, 1983.
The lowest temperature ever recorded at the surface of the Earth was −89.2 °C at the Russian Vostok Station in Antarctica July 21, 1983.
The lowest flying satellite typically orbits at an altitude of around 160-200 kilometers above Earth's surface. These are usually Earth observation satellites that operate in low Earth orbit (LEO).
The lowest layer of the atmosphere is the troposphere. This is where weather events occur, and it extends from the Earth's surface up to about 10-15 kilometers, depending on your location.
Because - the further you are away from the Earth's surface - the lower the temperature is.
The low surface temperature on Jupiter is estimated to be around -145 degrees Celsius (-234 degrees Fahrenheit). This frigid temperature is due to the planet's distance from the sun and its composition of mostly hydrogen and helium.
The lowest part of the thermosphere is called the lower thermosphere, which extends from about 80 to 550 kilometers above the Earth's surface. This region is characterized by a rapid increase in temperature as altitude increases.