I don't think so because what I learnt was that thermosphere was the thickest layer in the atmosphere and stratosphere we can find ozone layer. Hope this is right. Thanks :)
The thickest layer of the atmosphere is the troposphere, which is located closest to the Earth's surface. It extends up to about 10-15 kilometers above sea level and contains the majority of the Earth's atmospheric gases.
The thickest layer of the sun's atmosphere is the corona, which extends millions of kilometers into space. It is most visible during a total solar eclipse when it appears as a faint, pearly-white halo around the sun.
stratosphere
Venus has the thickest atmosphere among the planets in our solar system. Its atmosphere is composed mainly of carbon dioxide and thick clouds of sulfuric acid, creating intense pressure and trapping heat to create a runaway greenhouse effect.
I don't think so because what I learnt was that thermosphere was the thickest layer in the atmosphere and stratosphere we can find ozone layer. Hope this is right. Thanks :)
What is the highest in the thickest layer
no other layer is as thick is the thermosphere.
In the Troposphere, or the lowest layer.
The thickest layer of the atmosphere is the troposphere, which is located closest to the Earth's surface. It extends up to about 10-15 kilometers above sea level and contains the majority of the Earth's atmospheric gases.
The thickest layer of the sun's atmosphere is the corona, which extends millions of kilometers into space. It is most visible during a total solar eclipse when it appears as a faint, pearly-white halo around the sun.
The highest layer of atmosphere is the exosphere. The layers from earth are; troposphere, stratosphere, mesosphere, thermosphere, exosphere.
The troposphere is the layer of the earth's atmosphere with the highest air pressure.
The thinnest layer to the thickest layer can be written as a fraction as follows: 1/thickest layer thickness.
atmosphere it has the highest layer
Mesosphere
The troposphere is the thickest layer of the atmosphere, extending from the Earth's surface up to about 10-15 kilometers (6-9 miles) in altitude. This layer contains most of the Earth's weather systems and is where we live and where most of our weather occurs.