Most meteors burn up in the mesosphere. The mesosphere starts at 31 miles above Earth's surface and goes up to 53 miles high.
Meteors usually burn up in the mesosphere, in altitude from 75 km to 100 km
in earth atmosphere.as long as the meteor is small enough it burns up in earths atmoshere but rarly they dont burn up and make it though.
Meteors burn up when the start coming through the atmosphere. They may burn up completely or land on the earth as tiny pieces.
A meteor burns out in the sky and never hits the ground depending on what type of meteor it is.
This question makes no sense. Is it referring to layers of the Earth's crust, or layers of the atmosphere? Keep in mind, that the term "meteor" would be limited to a natural object entering Earth's atmosphere. Upon striking the ground, it would by definition, become a meteorite.
Where the meteor burns up depends in large part on its original mass, its velocity and its angle of entry. Most burn up in the ionosphere, but some survive into the stratosphere, and some penetrate the troposphere and actually strike the Earth.
The atmosphere or more precisely the mesosphere
The Mesosphere. (The Mesosphere is the middle part of the Earth's atomsphere.)
I am fairly sure that this layer is the mesosphere. :) :3
the mesosphere
The Mesosphere
Mesophere. They don't burn up because of the ambient air temperature, but because of the heat generated by friction - they are moving incredibly fast.
Meteors burn up in the high atmosphere. If they land on Earth, they become meteorites.
The layers of the atmosphere are thetroposhphere where most of the weather occurs and this is the layer we live on. The stratospher is the layer that contains thes ozone and 19% of the gasses. The moseospher is the thirs layer and is the coldest plus meteors burn up in this layer. The thermospher is the 4th layer and the warmest. The exosphere is the outer most layer and is often called outerspace.
The entire atmosphere will burn up small asteroids (meteors), but larger ones will strike the Earth. This is how the Caribbean Sea was created.
The zone - or layer - that sits above the stratosphere is the mesosphere. This layer extends from about 50 km (or 31 miles) to around 85 km (or 53 miles) above the surface of the Earth. The mesosphere is where meteors will burn up as they enter the atmosphere. The temperature of this layer decreases with height.
mesophere
The mesosphere is the coldest layer in our atmosphere because it is right above the ozone layer.Hurricanes form in this layerMost meteors burn up in this layer, as well.
Meteors burn up in the Mesosphere because of friction between the meteors and the molecules located here. The mesosphere is the coldest part of the Earth's atmosphere.
Meteors burn up in the Mesosphere because of friction between the meteors and the molecules located here. The mesosphere is the coldest part of the Earth's atmosphere.
Mesophere. They don't burn up because of the ambient air temperature, but because of the heat generated by friction - they are moving incredibly fast.
The meteors will travel through the exosphere and thermosphere without much trouble due to the lack of air in those layers, but when they hit the middle layer, there are enough gases to cause friction and create heat to burn up in the Mesosphere.
The hottest layer is the mesosphere that is why meteors and asteroids burn in this layer .
A meteorite is an object from space that has hit the surface of earth. Therefore you will find them at the bottom of the troposphere. However, you were probably refering to meteors. Most meteors are visible in the lower themosphere or upper troposphere.
Meteors burn up in the high atmosphere. If they land on Earth, they become meteorites.
The layers of the atmosphere are thetroposhphere where most of the weather occurs and this is the layer we live on. The stratospher is the layer that contains thes ozone and 19% of the gasses. The moseospher is the thirs layer and is the coldest plus meteors burn up in this layer. The thermospher is the 4th layer and the warmest. The exosphere is the outer most layer and is often called outerspace.
Temperatures decrease in the third layer of the atmosphere the mesosphere. This is where meteors burn up and cause shooting stars.
Meteoroids burn up in the Mesosphere. Even though the Mesosphere is the coldest layer, the meteoroids burn up from getting too cold. Meteoroids are also more commonly known as "shooting stars".