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It is Exosphere
The troposphere. Pressure decreases as elevation increases.
Decrease
5.6 kilometers
Troposphere Stratosphere Mesosphere Thermosphere Exosphere
As a general rule in the atmosphere, the higher the elevation the lower the temperature. However, certain atmospheric conditions may produce an 'inversion', where temperature increases with elevation.
Temperature decreases as the elevation increases.
The relationship between elevation and climate has to do with temperature. The higher up the elevation is the colder the temperature is.
The temperature of th earth's atmosphere drops about 5 degree centigrate for every 1000m elevation above the earths surfaceif the air temperature at the ground level is 15degc and presure is 760mm of hg.at what elevation the pressure is 380 mm of hg.assume that airbehaves like an ideal gas?
The boundary where temperature begins to increase with elevation, instead of decrease with elevation is called the Tropopause. This is where the the atmospheric layer closest to the ground, the Troposphere, encounters the Stratosphere, the second layer of our atmosphere.
The actual atmosphere itself does not change with elevation, but the atmospheric pressure does.
As you go higher into the atmosphere, the temperature decreases, because air lower down has absorbed all the heat reflected by the earth's sur
As the altitude or elevation increases the temperature decreases. The temperature drops about 6.5 degree Celsius for every I km increase.
equivalent noise temperature; elevation angle
the temperature of a radar is as hot as an elevation angle
In the troposphere, the temperature drops. In the stratosphere (layer above the troposphere) it increases with elevation. In the mesosphere, temperature drops again with elevation. In the theromosphere, it goes up again (to nearly stellar surface temperatures).
As elevation increases, temperature tends to decrease. This is known as the lapse rate, which is about 3.5°F for every 1,000 feet gained in elevation. This is why mountainous regions are often cooler than low-lying areas at the same latitude.