What is the coldest place in the solar system? (2024)

What is the coldest place in the solar system? (1)

Space is very, very cold. The baseline temperature of outer space is 2.7 kelvins — minus 454.81 degrees Fahrenheit, or minus 270.45 degrees Celsius — meaning it is barely above absolute zero, the point at which molecular motion stops.

But this temperature is not constant throughout the

solar system

. So-called "empty" space — though it is not actually empty — is far colder than planets, moons or

asteroids

, for example, because there is (practically) nothing to absorb the energy coming from the sun.

So, not including regular "empty" space, what is the coldest place in the solar system? And how does it compare with temperatures on Earth?

Related: What's the coldest place in the universe?

Measuring space

First, let's take a moment to consider exactly how cosmic temperatures are taken.

"Temperatures can be measured by observing the intensity of infrared and microwave radiation emitted from surfaces," Ian Crawford, a professor of planetary science and astrobiology at Birkbeck, University of London in the United Kingdom, told Live Science in an email. "In the absence of such measurements, temperatures can be estimated based on the amount of sunlight they receive."

However, taking cosmic measurements isn't always simple. According to Don Pollacco, a professor of astronomy at the University of Warwick in the United Kingdom, "nothing is ever straightforward in astronomy, mainly because you are always observing, as opposed to interacting."

So, although there are accurate ways to measure temperatures in space, there will always be room for refinement. "Temperatures are estimates," Pollacco said. "The numbers you calculate depend on how good your assumptions really are and how detailed the physical model is that you are using."

So, with those points in mind, what is the coldest place in the solar system, at least according to current data? Pluto, perhaps, given its distance from the

sun

?

In fact, the coldest place might be much closer to home.

To the moon

In 2009, the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, a NASA robotic spacecraft designed to help scientists better understand conditions on the moon, presented data suggesting that "shadowed craters" at the lunar south pole could be the coldest place in the solar system.

This theory was later reinforced by graduate student Patrick O'Brien and his adviser Shane Byrne, planetary researchers at the University of Arizona. During a talk at the 2022 Lunar and Planetary Science Conference, O'Brien and Byrne suggested that "doubly shadowed" moon craters could indeed be "the coldest locations in the solar system."

According to O'Brien and Byrne, a crater can be regarded as doubly shadowed if it is "shielded not only from direct solar illumination but also from secondary heating sources," such as "solar radiation reflected off nearby illuminated areas as well as thermal radiation emitted from those warm surfaces."

Pollacco added that "doubly shadowed" craters "have high enough rims that sunlight never reaches the crater floor," which is why they are so cold.

O'Brien and Byrne's research suggests that, given these "permanently shadowed regions" have been "shielded" from solar illumination for billions of years, their craters could contain "micro-cold traps" that contain "not only water ice, but also more volatile compounds and elements," such as carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, dinitrogen, and argon.

Related: What is the coldest city in the world?

According to O'Brien and Byrne, these craters are estimated to have temperatures of around 25 kelvins (minus 414.67 F, or minus 248.15 C), but they could be colder.

Crawford is confident in the veracity of the research. "I'm sure these are the coldest temperatures in the inner solar system [from Mercury to Mars] and also colder than the estimated average surface temperature of Pluto," he said.

The average surface temperature of Pluto, for context, is 40.4 kelvins, which is minus 386.95 F or minus 232.75 C,

according to NASA

.

However, these doubly shadowed moon craters may not be as cold as the Oort cloud, a shell of icy space debris located way beyond the orbit of Neptune, Crawford said. The distinction depends, he noted, on whether we include the Oort cloud when discussing the solar system.

What is the coldest place in the solar system? (2)

The Oort cloud is at once considered to be the "most distant region of our solar system" by NASA, but also "beyond" our solar system. This lack of clarity means it is sometimes regarded as part of the solar system, and at others defined as the boundary between our solar system and interstellar space. The Oort cloud is considered to only be '"loosely bound to the solar system," according to ThePlanets.org.

According to Northwestern University in Illinois, temperatures in the Oort cloud could be as cold as 5 kelvins (minus 450.67 F or minus 268.15 C), which would be far colder than any temperature found on our moon.

However, if we don't include the Oort cloud, the coldest place in the solar system is very likely to be found on our nearest celestial neighbor.

Earth comparisons

Related mysteries

Why is space a vacuum?

How does a black hole form?

Where is the center of the universe?

On Earth, even the coldest, most punishing Antarctic temperatures are far warmer than either the moon's craters or the Oort cloud. The coldest terrestrial temperature ever recorded — registered on July 21, 1983, at Russia's Vostok research station in Antarctica — was minus 128.6 F (minus 89.2 C), according to the World Meteorological Organization's World Weather & Climate Extremes Archive.

However, scientists have artificially created temperatures that are lower than those that occur naturally on Earth, in the moon's craters or even in the Oort cloud. Last year, a team of German researchers broke the record for the coldest temperature reached in a laboratory: a chilling minus 459.67 F (minus 273.15 C), which they achieved by "dropping magnetized gas 393 feet (120 meters) down a tower."

But when it comes to temperatures that occur naturally, the darkest, most shadowy recesses of our moon seem very likely to boast the lowest temperature in our solar system — depending, of course, on how you choose to classify the Oort cloud.

Originally published on Live Science.

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What is the coldest place in the solar system? (3)

Joe Phelan

Live Science Contributor

Joe Phelan is a journalist based in London. His work has appeared in VICE, National Geographic, World Soccer and The Blizzard, and has been a guest on Times Radio. He is drawn to the weird, wonderful and under examined, as well as anything related to life in the Arctic Circle. He holds a bachelor's degree in journalism from the University of Chester.

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What is the coldest place in the solar system? (2024)

FAQs

What is the coldest place in our solar system? ›

In 2009, it was discovered by NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter that Hermite is the coldest place recorded in the solar system, with temperatures at 26 kelvins (−413 °F, −247 °C). For comparison, Pluto's surface only gets down to about 43 kelvins (−382 °F, −229 °C).

Which is the coldest planet in the solar system answer? ›

Neptune is an incredible three billion miles away from the Sun. However, the coldest planet is not Neptune, but Uranus – even though Uranus is a billion miles closer to the Sun than Neptune. Uranus holds the record for the coldest temperature ever measured in the Solar System: a very chilly -224℃.

What is the coldest area on the planet? ›

On an icy plateau in eastern Antarctica, temperatures can drop as low as minus 144 F (minus 98 C), making it the coldest place on Earth. Researchers found this by reexamining satellite data taken over a ridge on the Antarctic Ice sheet that had previously reached minus 135 F (minus 93 C).

What part of space is the coldest? ›

The coldest place in the universe is the Boomerang Nebula (1 degree K). It is the only object scientists have discovered with colder temperatures than the Cosmic Microwave background — the background radiation or background grow left by the Big Bang (3 degrees K).

Where is the coldest place on the Sun? ›

With data from Big Bear Solar Observatory's Goode Solar Telescope, researchers discover intense wave energy in the coldest region on the Sun, the sunspot umbra, which is driving puzzling temperatures in the star's upper atmosphere.

What is the 2 coldest planet in our solar system? ›

Uranus: Minus 320°F (-195°C) Neptune: Minus 330°F (-200°C) Dwarf Planet Pluto: Minus 375°F (-225°C)

What is the coldest thing in the universe? ›

Yet, there is one object we know of out in the universe that is able to chill a region of space even colder than the temperature of the CMB. The coldest place in the universe, a young planetary nebula called the Boomerang Nebula, is -457.87 degrees Fahrenheit (-272.15 degrees Celsius).

What is the coldest planet in the whole universe? ›

What is the coldest known planet? Exoplanet OGLE-2005-BLG-390L b is the coldest known planet, according to NASA, with an average temperature the same as Uranus' record low of minus 370 degrees. According to NASA, this exoplanet is 21,526 lightyears from Earth, and its discovery was announced in the year 2005.

Which is the no. 1 coldest place in the world? ›

At a bone-chilling minus 144 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 98 degrees Celsius), NASA says the East Antarctica Plateau in Antarctica is the coldest place on Earth.

Is anywhere getting colder? ›

In recent years, the world has witnessed a puzzling phenomenon: despite global warming, winters in regions like East Asia and North America are becoming colder.

How cold is a black hole? ›

Stellar black holes are very cold: they have a temperature of nearly absolute zero – which is zero Kelvin, or −273.15 degrees Celsius. Supermassive black holes are even colder. But a black hole's event horizon is incredibly hot. The gas being pulled rapidly into a black hole can reach millions of degrees.

What is the coldest liquid? ›

Liquid Helium – The Coldest Liquid on Earth

The boiling point of helium is 4.2 K or -269 °C. Liquid helium is the coldest liquid on earth. It is mainly used as coolant to reach extremely low temperatures.

Will space get colder? ›

Originating when the universe was much denser and hotter than it is now, the starting temperature of the radiation that makes up the CMB is estimated to have been around 3,000 K (5,000° F/2,726⁰C). As the universe continues to expand, that means space is colder now than it's ever been and it's getting colder.

What is the coldest place in our galaxy? ›

What is the universe's coldest location? According to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the coldest point in the cosmos is the Boomerang Nebula. According to NASA, the Boomerang Nebula is the coldest spot in the known cosmos, with a temperature of one degree Kelvin.

Where is the coldest planet in the universe? ›

What is the coldest known planet? Exoplanet OGLE-2005-BLG-390L b is the coldest known planet, according to NASA, with an average temperature the same as Uranus' record low of minus 370 degrees. According to NASA, this exoplanet is 21,526 lightyears from Earth, and its discovery was announced in the year 2005.

What is the most cold place in the universe? ›

The coldest place in the universe, a young planetary nebula called the Boomerang Nebula, is -457.87 degrees Fahrenheit (-272.15 degrees Celsius).

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