Stratosphere and Troposphere
Most aircraft do not travel in the stratosphere. Some military and passenger jets fly in the stratosphere, but most aircraft fly in the troposphere, below the stratosphere.
Mostly in the troposphere but on longer range flights they can climb into the lower portions of the stratosphere.
The layer is stratosphere. It contains the ozone layer.
stratosphere
Airlines prefer to fly in the troposphere and spy planes or supersonic jets fly in the stratosphere. And also so they can avoid storms. they fly in the stratosphere because it contains the jet stream
Airplanes fly in the Stratosphere, which is the second major layer of the Earth's atmosphere. It is below the mesosphere and above the troposphere. It is stratified in temperature, with warmer layers higher up and cooler layers farther down. This is in contrast to the troposphere near the Earth's surface, which is cooler higher up and warmer farther down. The winds in the stratosphere run parallel to the Earth in fast moving air streams.
To avoid turbulence, most commercial jets fly in the upper layer of the troposphere, which varies in height depending on latitude, typically 40,000 feet (5 km). This is on the border of the tropopause, just above the troposphere, and the lower layer of the stratosphere in some cases.
Stratosphere
Type your answer here... airplanes fly in the stratosphere to avoid weather problems
No, Helicopters cannot fly in Stratosphere. It is too high for them. They do not produce that much lift. But they can fly in the Troposphere.
They Fly In the Stratosphere. The Stratosphere is the 2 Major Atmosphere