The segment of the atmosphere that blends into interplanetary space is known as the exosphere. It is the outermost layer of Earth's atmosphere where the gas molecules are further apart and can escape into space. The exosphere is where the Earth's atmosphere merges with the vacuum of space.
The layer of the atmosphere that is considered outer space is called the exosphere. This is the uppermost layer of the atmosphere, where the air is extremely thin and gradually transitions into the vacuum of space.
Space does not have an atmosphere. It is generally considered a vacuum. Planets and some moons have atmospheres.
The layer of the atmosphere that releases particles of air into space is the exosphere.
The layer of the atmosphere that merges into outer space is the exosphere. This is the outermost layer of the Earth's atmosphere where the air is very thin and gradually blends into the vacuum of space.
Different layers of the atmosphere are at different temperatures and create distortions when viewing objects from space, sort of like what a mirage does on a road on a hot day.
The Earth's atmosphere modifies its appearance.
Because otherwise we would be pulled into space.
An atmosphere implies the presence of a gaseous substance (such as air, in the earth's atmosphere, which is primarily made up of nitrogen and oxygen). Space is defined as the absence of atmosphere (as pure space consists of no solid, liquid or gaseous substance).
Weather requires an atmosphere to occur, as it involves the interaction of air masses with different temperatures and pressures. Space is a vacuum, devoid of any atmosphere, which is why there is no weather in space. Temperature variations and other phenomena in space are driven by other mechanisms, such as solar radiation.
The different layers of gases that extend from the surface of the Earth into space are the troposphere, stratosphere, mesosphere, thermosphere, and exosphere. Each of these layers has different characteristics, temperatures, and compositions, and they play various roles in regulating our atmosphere and protecting life on Earth.
... from the atmosphere.... from the atmosphere.... from the atmosphere.... from the atmosphere.
Atmosphere is the space surrounding any planetry body where the body exerts its gravitational pull. Space is anything / everything beyond the atmosphere
It's not in the atmosphere.
The segment of the atmosphere that blends into interplanetary space is known as the exosphere. It is the outermost layer of Earth's atmosphere where the gas molecules are further apart and can escape into space. The exosphere is where the Earth's atmosphere merges with the vacuum of space.
The atmosphere of the space station is the same as on Earth, 78% nitrogen and 21% oxygen.
When light waves move from empty space into the Earth's atmosphere, they will refract or bend due to the change in the medium's density. The different gases in the atmosphere will cause the light waves to slow down and change direction, leading to effects like dispersion, scattering, and absorption.