Ofcourse,It is not possible with a naked eye
but you can sure see it when you do with a hi fi telescope.
While you can see the clouds that float in the air, you do not see the atmosphere itself, whether you are on the earth or in space. You look through the atmosphere to see sea and land.
The sky we see is in our atmosphere we can't see space from earth with all the stars we can see that because it's dark, sun is not shining on that bit of our planet. The blue sky and the cloud we see is in our atmosphere that stays close to the earth. When you go into space you breakthrough the atmosphere and out into space. The moon doesn't have an atmosphere so you can see straight into space.
NITROGEN, N2 , ABOUT 78% See the Related Questions link for more information about the composition of the Earth's atmosphere.
Stars twinkle due to the scattering effect of earth's atmosphere. In space this is no atmosphere, thus they do not twinkle. The sky is black in space because there is no scattering of light as there is in the atmosphere. The earth appears blue from space due to the color of the gases in the atmosphere, and their reflected light on large bodies of water.
The auroras we see on Earth are a result of Earth's magnetic field funneling high-energy particles from the sun into Earth's upper atmosphere, where excited electrons in gas molecules create a glow. The moon has no magnetic field and no atmosphere.
It means the Earth's atmosphere is affecting what you are seeing.
Yes and no. Our atmosphere is part of the earth, and when you see the blue sky you are actually seeing the light scattered by the atmosphere. Of course if you think of the sky as going all the way to the distant stars, then you are no longer talking about the earth's atmosphere.
The color depends on where, when, how and with what you are looking at the atmosphere. For example, astronaut might see it as "clear" but people watching a sunset might see it as more orange/red.
A shooting star, which is within the Earth's atmosphere.
very strong that it reflects the sun rays to the pole and we see them as aurora which are handful to the ecosystem on earth
An aurora occurs when charged particles of the sun excite the electrons of atoms in Earth's atmosphere. The moon does not have an atmosphere.
No, the atmosphere does not rotate with the Earth. The Earth's rotation causes the atmosphere to move with it, but the atmosphere itself does not rotate independently.