They are (from lowest altitude to highest)
Troposphere, which ranges from about 0-10 km above Earth's surface,
Stratosphere, which ranges from about 10-50 km above Earth's surface,
Mesosphere, which ranges from about 50-85 km above Earth's surface,
Thermosphere (largest), which ranges from about 85-500 km above Earth's surface, and
Exosphere, which ranges from 500 km above
The ozone layer is in the stratosphere.
The layers of atmosphere are different according to their functions. They are at different heights.
The different "layers" are classifications of horizontal sections of the atmosphere, volumes which exhibit different attributes. The high and low pressure regions are areas where the atmosphere is thicker or thinner.
They both have different layers
Because.
Density of air decreases on increasing height, hence we categorize the atmosphere into different layers from Troposhere to Ionosphere at particular kilometers respectively.
because there are different pressures in the air.
The layers of the atmosphere, from lowest to highest, are the troposphere, stratosphere, mesosphere, thermosphere, and exosphere. Each layer has distinct characteristics and plays a different role in Earth's atmosphere.
it is because all the layers have tempatures that are either cold or hot
The different scopes of the environment are atmosphere, hydrosphere, lithosphere, and biosphere. Atmosphere is the three layers of the air that envelop the earth.
The property that separates the Earth's atmosphere into layers is temperature. As you move higher up in the atmosphere, the temperature changes due to the absorption of sunlight and the presence of different gases. This leads to the formation of distinct layers such as the troposphere, stratosphere, mesosphere, thermosphere, and exosphere.
The five layers of the atmosphere have different atmospheric temperature that occurs with increasing altitude. The layers also thin out with height from the surface.
The different layers of gases that extend from the surface of the Earth into space are the troposphere, stratosphere, mesosphere, thermosphere, and exosphere. Each of these layers has different characteristics, temperatures, and compositions, and they play various roles in regulating our atmosphere and protecting life on Earth.