mesopause
Mesosphere
The lithosphere, asthenosphere, and mesosphere are all located within the Earth's upper mantle, which is part of the mantle layer. The lithosphere is the rigid outermost layer of the Earth, including the crust and uppermost mantle. The asthenosphere is a partially molten layer below the lithosphere, while the mesosphere is a solid layer beneath the asthenosphere.
The middle layer of the atmosphere is the Mesosphere.
The third layer of Earth's atmosphere is the mesosphere, located above the stratosphere and below the thermosphere. It extends from about 31 to 53 miles (50 to 85 kilometers) above the Earth's surface. Temperatures in the mesosphere decrease with altitude, reaching their coldest temperatures in the upper regions of this layer.
The temperature at the upper limit of the mesosphere, known as the mesopause, typically reaches around -90 degrees Celsius (-130 degrees Fahrenheit). This layer is situated approximately 85 to 100 kilometers (53 to 62 miles) above Earth's surface. The temperature decreases with altitude in the mesosphere, making it the coldest part of the Earth's atmosphere.
The thermosphere is the very upper lever of the atmosphere and the mesosphere is the layer underneath that one There are 4 layers of the atmosphere altogether :) x
No, although a large part of the mantle forms the mesosphere, the upper brittle mantle is part of the lithosphere and the ductile layer of the mantle below this is formed of the asthenosphere. The mantle below the asthenosphere (i.e. that part from 700 km down to the core-mantle boundary is the mesosphere).
Mesosphere
mesosphere
The mesosphere is a layer of the atmosphere. As such it is gaseous.
The atmosphere layer with the lowest temperature is the mesosphere. In this layer, temperatures can drop to as low as -90 degrees Celsius (-130 degrees Fahrenheit) at its upper boundary, known as the mesopause. The mesosphere extends from about 50 to 85 kilometers (31 to 53 miles) above the Earth's surface.
No, it does not snow in the mesosphere layer of the Earth's atmosphere. The mesosphere is too dry and thin for snow to form. Snow typically forms in the troposphere, the lowest layer of the atmosphere, where most weather phenomena occur.