It gets colder because there is less air pressure.
Well, the pressure actually might be dictated by the temperature, based on the ideal gas law. Temperature decreases as altitude increases. The temperature of outer space is extremely cold (3 Kelvin) due to it being nearly a vaccum (no gas particles). The sun emits radiation energy which warms our planet, not regular convection heat transfer that we are used to. In space, there are no bodies that readily accept this radiation, except satellites, which we cover in foil to be non radiative. Earth is such a body which accepts this radiation and is thus warmed to relatively warm temperatures (296 Kelvin).
So, consider outer space an ice cube and the earth a frying pan. The temperature goes from cold to hot in between the two bodies, forming a gradient.
evaporates
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It increases as the temperature increases.
It get's colder as you travel up into the atmosphere because the ozone layers block away a lot of heat. But once you get to the tropsphere layer te temperature is about 1,600 degrees because the sun goes throught that layer first, and that layer is about 500 kilometer's thick.
false, the temperature increases with depth
the rate of contraction increases with a rise in temperature and decreases with a fall in temperature
The density of the water increases with the salinity, so saline water is denser and sinks to the bottom. Temperature is also a factor, however. Cold, saline water is the densest
As the altitude increases, the temperature in the troposphere will decrease. The troposphere is the lowest portion of planet's atmosphere.
Temperature decreases as altitude increases.
The stratosphere's temperature increases as altitude increases. The mesosphere's temperature decreases as it's altitude increases. This is helpful
Temperature decreases as altitude increases.
No, the temperature in the troposphere decreases as the altitude increases.
As altitude increases pressure and temperature decrease.
No, the temperature does not increase in fact it decreases as the altitude increases yes it does.
As the altitude increases in the Troposphere, The air temperature decreases. When about 1 kilometer increases in altitude, the air cools about 6.5 degrees Celsius. And at the very top of the Troposphere the air temperature stays the same at around -60 degrees Celsius.
Normally, temperature decreases as altitude increases. In a temperature inversion, the temperature increases as altitude increases, up to the level of air that is causing the inversion. See "Temperature change as altitude increases?" for info on how temperature normally decreases with altitude when there is not a temperature inversion.The rate at which the temperature goes down is down 1.1 degrees celsius for every 500 feet you go up.
It increases.
As the altitude increases in the Troposphere, The air temperature decreases. When about 1 kilometer increases in altitude, the air cools about 6.5 degrees Celsius. And at the very top of the Troposphere the air temperature stays the same at around -60 degrees Celsius.
As the altitude increases in the Troposphere, The air temperature decreases. When about 1 kilometer increases in altitude, the air cools about 6.5 degrees Celsius. And at the very top of the Troposphere the air temperature stays the same at around -60 degrees Celsius.