due to the nature of the sun surface (with constant 'flares' and 'ejections'), there isn't really a STABLE zone at that kind of temperature. there are transient zones which flip quickly between much cooler and much hotter.
Date: October 10th, 2025 9:59 PM Author: buff sneaky criminal
It doesn't quite work like that in outer space because there's no air, and therefore no ambient temperature. Even at a distance from the sun that could theoretically heat you to exactly 70 degrees, you need the right albedo and angular speed to sustain a temperature of 70 Fahrenheit.