From sea level to an altitude of 300 meters there is enough oxygen. After 300 meters of altitude, there is enough oxygen. 4500 meters to 4800 meters of altitude and low atmospheric pressure due to lack of oxygen to human breath.
What I know is - and I don't know much - that there is half as much oxygen than hydrogen - one oxygen molecule per every two hydrogen molecules.
169 kms from earth to the sky level
whats the answer
well.logically it just makes sense that since there is less oxygen above sea level (mt Everest roughly 1/3 of the oxygen at sea level) that there would be more oxygen below sea level. note: this is completely hypothetical and has no scientific backing whatsoever
The mesosphere is the layer of Earth's atmosphere above the stratosphere and below the thermosphere. It extends from 50 kilometers to 100 kilometers above sea level. The name mesphere also, though less often, refers to a layer of Earth's mantle between the asthenosphere and the outer core. It extends from 660 kilometers to 2,700 kilometers below the surface.
The stratosphere isn't on earth's surface, the troposphere is. The stratosphere is the next level of the atmosphere from the troposphere. the atmosphere is about 600 miles or kilometers above earth's surface.
Oxygen's highest level is 100%. Oxygen's lowest level would be 20%.
the oxygen is 10%
2
no it is actually the highest point whcich is above 550 kilometers
No, it ends at an altitude of 80 kilometers
In kilometers, the elevation of the South Pole above sea level is 2.8349448.
35,000 feet = 10.668 kilometers (rounded)
5,280 feet is 1.61 kilometers.
200 km above sea level.
well.logically it just makes sense that since there is less oxygen above sea level (mt Everest roughly 1/3 of the oxygen at sea level) that there would be more oxygen below sea level. note: this is completely hypothetical and has no scientific backing whatsoever
Sea level oxygen is around 21% and Denver has about 18% available oxygen.
16,404.2 ft
large land area that measures millons of square kilometers and rises a considerable distance above sea level
The higher you climb the less oxygen there is. At the summit of Mount Everest there is approximately 33% of the oxygen that is available at sea level. That is why climbers use bottled oxygen on Mount Everest and other high altitude mountains to help them breathe more easily.