The temperature of the mesopause can vary depending on factors such as altitude and time of year, but it is generally around -90 to -100 degrees Celsius (-130 to -150 degrees Fahrenheit). This layer, which is about 85-100 km (53-62 miles) above the Earth's surface, is where the Earth's atmosphere transitions into space.
The planet with an atmospheric pressure similar to that 30 km above Earth's surface is Venus. At an altitude of about 50 km above Venus, the atmospheric pressure is comparable to Earth's surface pressure.
The ISS is maintained at an orbital altitude between 330 km (205 mi) and 435 km (270 mi).
It Decreases by 6.5 degrees Celsius per KM. Most weather occurs here where we live. Convection Currents. At the surface it extends out 6-8 km at the poles and 17 km at the equator. Even though the temperature decreases by 6.5 degrees celsivus per KM, it stabilizes at 12 km
Modern studies reveal that the mesopause consists of two minima - one at about 85 km and a stronger minimum at about 100 km.
870 km is its altitude according to NASA (answred bt divyansh tiwari)
The troposphere is the layer of the atmosphere that extends to an average altitude of about 12 km. This is where most weather phenomena occur and where temperature generally decreases with increasing altitude.
Normally, temperature decreases as altitude increases. In a temperature inversion, the temperature increases as altitude increases, up to the level of air that is causing the inversion. See "Temperature change as altitude increases?" for info on how temperature normally decreases with altitude when there is not a temperature inversion.The rate at which the temperature goes down is down 1.1 degrees celsius for every 500 feet you go up.
The approximate height of the stratopause is between 50 to 55 km. The temperature is about negative15 degrees Celsius or 5 degrees Fahrenheit.
The stratosphere is between the troposphere and the mesosphere and has an altitude starting around 30 km.
As the altitude or elevation increases the temperature decreases. The temperature drops about 6.5 degree Celsius for every I km increase.
well i am guessing that because of the higher altitude the temperature would be colder
Yes, that is the approximate speed of Earth, as it goes around the Sun. The exact speed depends on whether Earth is at periapsis or apapsis, but 30 km/sec. is a good approximation.Yes, that is the approximate speed of Earth, as it goes around the Sun. The exact speed depends on whether Earth is at periapsis or apapsis, but 30 km/sec. is a good approximation.Yes, that is the approximate speed of Earth, as it goes around the Sun. The exact speed depends on whether Earth is at periapsis or apapsis, but 30 km/sec. is a good approximation.Yes, that is the approximate speed of Earth, as it goes around the Sun. The exact speed depends on whether Earth is at periapsis or apapsis, but 30 km/sec. is a good approximation.
The temperature of the mesopause can vary depending on factors such as altitude and time of year, but it is generally around -90 to -100 degrees Celsius (-130 to -150 degrees Fahrenheit). This layer, which is about 85-100 km (53-62 miles) above the Earth's surface, is where the Earth's atmosphere transitions into space.
The planet with an atmospheric pressure similar to that 30 km above Earth's surface is Venus. At an altitude of about 50 km above Venus, the atmospheric pressure is comparable to Earth's surface pressure.
The temperature typically decreases by 6.4°C for every 1 km increase in altitude in the troposphere. So, the total temperature change between 3km and 7km above Earth's surface would be around 25.6°C, calculated by multiplying the lapse rate by the difference in altitude (6.4°C/km x 4km).
1 km = 1,000 meters2.75 km = (2.75 x 1,000) = 2,750 meters