There is no interaction of ozone layer with other layers. All of them are independent of each other.
The vast majority of the moisture in the earths's atmosphere. The amounts in the other layers are generally inconesquential.
The Earth's crust is the least dense layer. It is made up of rocks like granite and basalt and is relatively thin compared to the other layers of the Earth.
The ozone layer is very cold all year round. It is one of the cooler layers of our atmosphere.
temperature and other properties. These layers are the troposphere, stratosphere, mesosphere, and thermosphere. Each layer has distinct characteristics and plays a unique role in Earth's atmospheric processes.
The four layers that constitute the earths atmosphere in order from space to the earths surface are as follows: Inosphere (aka. Aurora) @ 350km, Mesosphere @ 90-350km, Stratosphere @ 50-90km, and Troposhere @18-50km. It's composition is 79% Nitrogen, 20% Oxygen, and 1% other gases.
The Troposhere has the most water vapor then any other layer in the atmosphere.
The ozone layer is a specific region in the stratosphere that contains a high concentration of ozone gas, which helps to protect Earth from harmful UV radiation. The atmosphere, on the other hand, is the blanket of gases that surrounds the Earth and is composed of multiple layers, including the troposphere where we live, the stratosphere where the ozone layer is found, and others.
Troposphere does not absorb solar radiation. All other layers do not absorb.
It is because some layers have gases that have gases that easily absorb the Sun's energy while the other layer do not. So some layer become cold and some layers become warm or hot. Please see the wikipedia page on the Earth's Atmosphere at the link below.
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.
The atmosphere is NOT again I repeat NOT a layer. The layers are the exosphere, the thermosphere, the ionosphere, the mesosphere, the stratosphere, the ozonesphere, and the troposphere.
The Earth's first three layers of the atmosphere, starting from the surface, are the troposphere, stratosphere, and mesosphere. The troposphere is where most weather occurs, the stratosphere contains the ozone layer that protects us from the sun's harmful rays, and the mesosphere is where meteors burn up upon entering the atmosphere.