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The atmosphere above 80km (50 mi) and the homosphere where gases are stratified, with concentrations of the heavier gases decreasing more rapidly with altitude than concentrations of the lighter gases
in homosphere the concentration of gases remain same and gases are mixed while in heterosphere conc. of gases is different and gases are in the form of layers.Read more: What_is_the_difference_between_homosphere_and_the_heterosphere
In the homosphere the concentration of gases remains the same throughout, and the gases are mixed, always in the same proportions. In the heterosphere the concentration of gases is different in different places, and the gases are typically in the form of layers, rather than mixed together.
stratosphere is in the heterosphere
The gases in the mesosphere are stratified because they are different weights; with the lightest and least dense at the very outer edge, this is the layer where meteors burn up as they enter the Earth's atmosphere.
Thermosphere and exosphere
The homosphere is the portion of the earth's atmosphere, up to an altitude of about 50 miles above sea level, in which there is continuous turbulent mixing, and hence the composition of the atmosphere is relatively constant; as opposed to the heterosphere or exosphere, the higher regions in which the composition becomes stratified
Stratified refers to layers. The epithelial cells are arranged as such.
The stratified squamos lines the inside of the mouth.
Stratified rocks have a defined horizontal layering.
Simple columnar epithelium cells will heal faster than stratified squamous cells. The stratified squamous cells rarely have contact with blood.
A couple of synonyms for stratified are flaky, laminated, or stratiform.