Heat, technically, is just energy from the atoms in whatever is getting hot. Since there is nothing to heat outside the atmosphere, the heat must stay here at Earth.
So, no.
The sun heats the atmosphere. Solar radiation largely passes through the atmosphere and warms the surface of the earth. The earth then radiates heat up into the lower levels of the atmosphere where greenhouse gases warm. The warmed greenhouse gases then continue to radiate heat in all directions warming the atmosphere and again the earth's surface.
mesosphere
the earths surface.
As a rock is falling through the atmosphere, it is a meteor. When it hits the earths surface, it is a meteoroid.
When Earths surface is heated it radiates some of the energy back into the atmosphere as "Infrared Radiation."
It will cool the earth's surface as radiation from the sun is blocked from entering the atmosphere
Gravity.
No, the earth's atmosphere reflects and absorbs x-rays, so they do not make it to the surface.
The sun heats the atmosphere. Solar radiation largely passes through the atmosphere and warms the surface of the earth. The earth then radiates heat up into the lower levels of the atmosphere where greenhouse gases warm. The warmed greenhouse gases then continue to radiate heat in all directions warming the atmosphere and again the earth's surface.
Ozone in the atmosphere blocks most of the UV radiation from the Sun... Without it's protection - the planet would overheat.
mesosphere
Thermosphere, it is also the atmosphere with the highest temperatures.
the atmosphere
the earths surface.
the earths surface.
As a rock is falling through the atmosphere, it is a meteor. When it hits the earths surface, it is a meteoroid.
As a rock is falling through the atmosphere, it is a meteor. When it hits the earths surface, it is a meteoroid.