answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

The air becomes less denser.

User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: When one ascends in the atmosphere the air becomes?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

How does air pressure vary with elevation?

The pressure of the air on one square-inch of your head is the weight of air from that square-inch all the way up to the top of the atmosphere. As you go up in elevation, some of the atmosphere is below you, and there is less of it above you. So the weight on each square inch, and thus the air pressure, becomes less.


What is One who ascends in a balloon?

a balloonist


What is a one word substitute for atmosphere?

For the Earth's atmosphere, air. For the atmosphere of a location, it could be mood or aura.


What is the gasous air around a planet called?

Atmosphere-if it has one


How many feet of air equal one atmosphere?

33


How is the air found in soils different from the air i the atmosphere?

They are different because one is in the air and the others and the other is in soil


The least prominent gas in the atmosphere?

The least prominent gas in the atmosphere is xenon. It represents no more than one percent on the air in the atmosphere.


Why air get cooler when rose?

As the concentration of dust particles becomes less as one goes up, there the heat absorbed the dust particles is also relatively less. Therefore, the temperature decreases as one goes up. The air, in turn, when comes in contact with the atmosphere above also gets cooled.


How does a tornado destroy the atmosphere?

They don't. Tornadoes move air from one place to another, but in no way do they destroy the atmosphere.


Can you name some atmospheres?

The atmosphere is a single one. It is a blanket of air.


What is is the weight of air for the entire atmosphere?

5.28 x 10000000000000000000 kg is the weight of air for the entire atmosphere.


What is the speed of sound in air that is 12 celsius?

In dry air at one atmosphere, it is 338.7 metres/second.