16 to 80 km from earth surface
nitrogen and oxygen
If a space shuttle travels at 17,500 (mph) (highest recorded time so far) well; you work it out!
because you can take a space ship/a rocket and fly/go up there.
The temperature in the stratosphere rises because it absorbs ultraviolet radiation from the Sun. This radiation heats up the ozone layer in the stratosphere, causing the temperature to increase with altitude.
The International Space Station orbits Earth at an average altitude of about 420 kilometers (260 miles).
Planes can go up to the STRATOSPHERE.
Ozone is far away in stratosphere. It is because the factors for creation of ozone are up there.
the layers of the atmosphere in order are troposphere, stratosphere, mesosphere, thermosphere, and exosphere
as you go higher the air becomes thinner and colder until eventually you reach space where there is no air and it extremely cold
the temperature already rise as you climb up in the stratosphere.
The stratosphere is a casino in Las Vegas. To go up to the top of the tower it costs $18 for an adult and $10 for a child. Senior citizens can go up for $12 which is the same as the price for a resident of Nevada.
The stratosphere is the second layer in the atmosphere, right above the troposphere. The air is warmer the higher you go up and cooler farther down. Commercial aircraft flies in the lower layer of the stratosphere.
The stratosphere starts about 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) above the Earth's surface and extends up to about 50 kilometers (31 miles) high.
No u do not need to go up into space to be an astronaut. Actually many astronauts train and train but don't get to go up in space.
Stratosphere is pretty thick layer of earth. It is a layer which forms the essence of atmosphere. The stratosphere or the lower stratosphere consists of ozone gas.
If you could go out in space far enough where the light produced from the birth of the milky was has reached and have a device that could pick up the remains of the light and decipher it, then you could. But there is currently nothing that could go out in space that far or take a picture that well to do so.
In general, temperatures decline as we increase our altitude. The higher we go, the colder it is. The answer to the question about whether temperatures get warmer as we move from the lower stratosphere on up is, "No."