No, the thermosphere lies between the mesosphere and exosphere.
ionosphere
No the troposphere lies between it.
mesosphere
The atmosphere is divided into five layers. It is thickest near the surface and thins out with height until it eventually merges with space. The layers from lowest to highest : - The Troposphere (up to 10 km) It's the atmosphere that surrounds us. On top of that comes... - The Stratosphere (10-50 km) Very little oxygen or water vapor. Aircraft fly in the lower stratosphere. This is also where the ozone layer exists. On top of that comes... - The Mesosphere (50-80 km) This is where most meteors burn up, because the density is higher than the outer layers. On top of that comes... - The Thermosphere (80-650 km) Practically a vacuum. Includes the ionosphere (auroras) as well as space station orbits. On top of that comes... - The Exosphere (500-2000 km) The farthest any of Earth's atmosphere exists. Based on charged particles and not necessarily gas molecules, some atmospheric models combine the Exosphere into the Thermosphere, making the outermost layer the Magnetosphere, a vast region where atmospheric ions interact with the solar wind in space.
The mesosphere lies between ~4800 km and ~8000 km above the Earth's surface
The outer core lies under the mesosphere.
the mantle, which contains the lithosphere, asthenosphere and the mesosphere
Mesosphere lies above the core.
The Mesosphere lies below the Asthenosphere.Above the Asthenosphere is the Lithosphere.
Space,Galaxies,Stuff like that.........
Mesosphere lies above the core.
The mesosphere is an atmospheric layer, which can also be considered a collection of layers. The mesosphere lies above the stratosphere but below the thermosphere, the other two "middle" layers of the atmosphere.