Want this question answered?
The Thermosphere
The warmest layer of the atmosphere is the Thermosphere
The outer layer of the sun is the Corona. No reactions really take place there, and it is vastly less dense than the rest of the sun. It can reach extremely high temperatures despite that because there is a lot of room for the particles to move around, however the temperatures do not reach that of the inner layers.
The theremosphere is 85-500 km above the earth's surface...
Temperatures between day and night vary tremendously because the moon has no atmosphere to hold in heat. Daytime temperatures are around 253 degrees and at night, the temperature drops to around -387 degrees.
Temperatures drop in the Mesosphere because of the height of this layer of the atmosphere. At eighty kilometers temperatures reach a minus ninety degrees centigrade.
The Thermosphere
comets are found in the meosphere. this layer is quite cold. it can reach temperatures of -125
theremosphere
Thermosphere
The mesosphere is part of the atmosphere. It is the coldest part and can reach temperatures of nearly minus 100 degrees.
The warmest layer of the atmosphere is the Thermosphere
Saturn has the hottest temperatures at the center of the planet with temperatures that can reach 20,000 degrees Fahrenheit. The coldest temperature occurs in the outer layers of Saturn's atmosphere and they can reach minus 238 degrees Fahrenheit.
The thermosphere is the outer layer of the atmosphere and is literally known as the heat sphere. The temperature can constantly rise in this layer and reach up to 1000 degrees Celsius.
# Thermosphere:The word thermosphere means "heat sphere," or "warm layer." The temperatur of the thermosphere may reach 2000 degrees C or more. # Mesosphere:The tempereature in the mesosphere drops to about -100 degrees C. # Stratosphere:The stratospher is still cold, but not so cold as the Mesosphere. Temperatures stay around -60 degrees C. # Troposphere:The tropospher is the layer in which we all live.
The Thermosphere, which can reach temperatures up to 2,500�° C (4,500�° F).
No