In the exosphere, the temperature increases as you move higher because the few gas molecules present can absorb more solar radiation, resulting in a rise in temperature. However, since the exosphere is very sparsely populated with particles, its temperature in terms of the perceived "hotness" would not be noticeable to a human observer.
In the exosphere layer, the outermost layer of Earth's atmosphere, gases such as hydrogen and helium are present but in very low densities. This is where Earth's atmosphere gradually transitions into outer space. Due to the extremely low density of particles, temperatures can vary widely ranging from very hot to very cold.
70 degrees Fahrenheit or 20 degrees C
The exosphere can extend up to around 10,000 km (6,200 miles) above Earth's surface. It gradually transitions into outer space and contains extremely low densities of gas molecules. The exosphere is where satellites orbit Earth.
The exosphere is the outermost layer of Earth's atmosphere that gradually blends into space. It is composed of very low-density gases that extend up to thousands of kilometers from the Earth's surface.
temperature and altitude
the temp goes down, the winds go up, and the pressure goes up...
That happens because the objects are in free fall.
the air gets thinner.
The main characteristic of the exosphere is that the density of the atmosphere is so low that there are no significant amount of collisions between molecules. Most of the time, molecules just go up into the exosphere, follow a parabolic trajectory, and fall back down.
In the exosphere layer, the outermost layer of Earth's atmosphere, gases such as hydrogen and helium are present but in very low densities. This is where Earth's atmosphere gradually transitions into outer space. Due to the extremely low density of particles, temperatures can vary widely ranging from very hot to very cold.
yes
Well, that's hard to say. You can take an estimate by knowing that it is the uppermost atmospheric layer, and that beyond it, is outer space. The exosphere is right above the thermosphere (and ionosphere), and the thermosphere can range up to 85-500 km. above Earth. So yeah, the exosphere is pretty high up. P.S. The exosphere is where space shuttles travel.
70 degrees Fahrenheit or 20 degrees C
The temp sending unit may be at fault.
balo
The exosphere can extend up to around 10,000 km (6,200 miles) above Earth's surface. It gradually transitions into outer space and contains extremely low densities of gas molecules. The exosphere is where satellites orbit Earth.
the layers of the atmosphere in order are troposphere, stratosphere, mesosphere, thermosphere, and exosphere