The primary heat source for the stratosphere is the absorption of ultraviolet (UV) radiation from the Sun by the ozone layer. This absorption process warms the stratosphere, particularly in its upper regions, creating a temperature inversion where temperatures increase with altitude. Unlike the troposphere, where temperature decreases with height, this warming effect contributes to the stability of the stratospheric layer.
The stratosphere is cold because it is heated from below by the Earth's surface but does not have direct contact with the surface, so it lacks a significant source of heat. Additionally, the stratosphere contains ozone molecules that absorb and redistribute incoming solar radiation, leading to a temperature increase with altitude.
Internal heat source include celestial objects, such as moons, dwarf planets, brown dwarfs, stars and planets.
Uranus and Neptune are the two jovian planets that do not have a significant internal heat source. They receive most of their heat from the sun and do not generate as much internal heat as Jupiter and Saturn.
Stratosphere is the layer above troposphere. Troposphere is the first layer and is below the stratosphere.
The answer is Nuclear Fusion
The stratosphere is cold because it is heated from below by the Earth's surface but does not have direct contact with the surface, so it lacks a significant source of heat. Additionally, the stratosphere contains ozone molecules that absorb and redistribute incoming solar radiation, leading to a temperature increase with altitude.
The source of warming in the upper stratosphere is primarily the absorption of high-energy solar radiation by ozone molecules. This absorption leads to an increase in temperature as the ozone molecules absorb the energy and heat up the surrounding stratospheric air.
The main source is CFC's. They are present in deodorants.
In the stratosphere, heat primarily comes from the absorption of ultraviolet (UV) radiation by ozone molecules. This process warms the stratosphere as ozone absorbs UV light from the Sun, converting it into thermal energy. Additionally, the stratosphere's temperature increases with altitude, which is a reversal of the temperature trend seen in the troposphere below. This warming effect contributes to the stable temperature structure of the stratosphere.
the sun is our source of heat
Yes the sun is a source of heat.
Heat does, indeed, go from a warm source to a cold place. That is what heat always does.
A heat wave is a source of thermal energy.
The main source of energy and heat is the sun.
Mercury does not have its own heat source. It receives heat from the Sun or its surroundings and does not generate heat internally.
sun is the primary source of heat and light......
The stratosphere is typically cold. Temperatures generally decrease with altitude in the stratosphere due to the low concentration of water vapor and presence of ozone, which absorbs and retains heat.