The exosphere is the least dense part of the earth's atmosphere.
Yes and no. Our atmosphere is part of the earth, and when you see the blue sky you are actually seeing the light scattered by the atmosphere. Of course if you think of the sky as going all the way to the distant stars, then you are no longer talking about the earth's atmosphere.
Like all weather events on earth, tornadoes take place within and as a part of earth's atmosphere. They are produced by thunderstorms, which are driven by thermodynamic instability in earth's atmosphere.
The outermost part of Earth's atmosphere is the exosphere, which extends from about 500 km to 10,000 km above the surface. Satellites in geostationary orbit, located at an altitude of about 35,786 km, are still within Earth's exosphere.
The Moon has no protective atmosphere, as Earth does. On Earth, the atmosphere absorbs part of the heat, and moves it around.
No, earth's crust is not part of the atomosphere.
No, the magnetosphere is not part of the Earth's atmosphere. It's the region surrounding the Earth where the planet's magnetic field interacts with solar winds. The atmosphere is the layer of gases that surrounds the Earth.
Yes, Earth's atmosphere is about 78% nitrogen.
The exosphere is the least dense part of the earth's atmosphere.
no,because atmosphere is not part of the earth. Geosphere is a land or a solid part.
The Earth's atmosphere is kept in place by gravitational pull the Earth exerts on particles in the atmosphere. But part of the Earth's atmosphere does float out into space. The part that is lost out into space is the extremely light particles like Hydrogen which can escape the Earth's gravity.
The five layers of the Earth's atmosphere are within the Earth, as part of the planet's atmosphere. These layers include the troposphere, stratosphere, mesosphere, thermosphere, and exosphere.
Troposphere
Troposphere
Troposphere...
Atmosphere
Atmosphere