the layer is the thermosphere
THERMOSPHERE IS THE ANSWER
The International Space Station (ISS) orbits within the thermosphere, which is located about 200 to 400 kilometers (124 to 248 miles) above Earth's surface. This layer of the atmosphere is characterized by high temperatures and low density. The ISS typically operates at an altitude of approximately 400 kilometers (about 248 miles). The thermosphere also contains the ionosphere, which is important for communication and navigation systems.
The International Space Station (ISS) orbits within the thermosphere layer of the Earth's atmosphere. The ISS orbits at an average altitude of about 420 kilometers (260 miles) above the Earth's surface, within the thermosphere where the auroras occur and temperatures can reach thousands of degrees Celsius.
The Shuttle and the ISS orbit in the thermosphere or ionosphere (I think both terms are correct, not sure but I've heard both). This layer starts at 85km and goes up to 600km, after which is the exosphere. "Space" technically starts at 100km. The ISS orbits around 350km, and obviously so does the Shuttle when it is docked, although when it first gets in to orbit the Shuttle is only at about 150km and speeds up over the few days after launch to match its orbit with the ISS. It is still atmosphere because there are stray atoms of oxygen and such up there. In fact there is enough of it that periodically the ISS has to speed itself back up because even though the amount of drag is infinitesimal, it still slows it down slightly over time.
Thermosphere and the exosphere
The thinnest layer of the atmosphere is Exosphere.
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The International Space Station (ISS) orbits within the thermosphere, which is located about 200 to 400 kilometers (124 to 248 miles) above Earth's surface. This layer of the atmosphere is characterized by high temperatures and low density. The ISS typically operates at an altitude of approximately 400 kilometers (about 248 miles). The thermosphere also contains the ionosphere, which is important for communication and navigation systems.
The International Space Station (ISS) orbits within the thermosphere layer of the Earth's atmosphere. The ISS orbits at an average altitude of about 420 kilometers (260 miles) above the Earth's surface, within the thermosphere where the auroras occur and temperatures can reach thousands of degrees Celsius.
A layer in atmosphere is at risk. The layer is ozone layer.
The ozone layer is in the stratosphere. It is one of the layer of atmosphere.
The ozone layer is in the stratosphere. It is one of the layer of atmosphere.
The Shuttle and the ISS orbit in the thermosphere or ionosphere (I think both terms are correct, not sure but I've heard both). This layer starts at 85km and goes up to 600km, after which is the exosphere. "Space" technically starts at 100km. The ISS orbits around 350km, and obviously so does the Shuttle when it is docked, although when it first gets in to orbit the Shuttle is only at about 150km and speeds up over the few days after launch to match its orbit with the ISS. It is still atmosphere because there are stray atoms of oxygen and such up there. In fact there is enough of it that periodically the ISS has to speed itself back up because even though the amount of drag is infinitesimal, it still slows it down slightly over time.
The UV rays must pass through atmosphere. So the layer must be in Atmosphere. The layer of the atmosphere is he ozone layer.
The hottest layer of the atmosphere is the thermosphere.
The outermost layer of the Earth's Atmosphere is the thermosphere.
the outermost layer of the sun's atmosphere is the corona.
The layer of atmosphere is stratosphere. It is the second layer to troposphere.