There is no such planet in our solar system. Perhaps you meant the atmosphere of the planet. The Earth has an atmosphere that's mainly nitrogen
Mars has an atmosphere, though it is different than our atmosphere here on Earth. The atmosphere of Mars is thin, cold, and dry and contains much less oxygen than the atmosphere of Earth. The oxygen content of the Martian atmosphere is only 0.13 percent, compared with 21 percent in Earth's atmosphere. Carbon dioxide makes up 95.3 percent of the gas in the atmosphere of Mars. It also contains nitrogen and argon and very small amounts of water and methane. Additionally, the atmospheric pressure on Mars is only about 1/100 that of Earth's!
The oxygen in Earth's atmosphere comes from photosynthesis, which is carried out by plants and algae. Earth is the only planet known to have life, which is the only way we know of that would cause a planet to have an oxygen-rich atmosphere. Oxygen can form from the chemical breakdown of water via sunlight, but only in trace amounts.
The troposphere is primarily composed of Nitrogen (N2), which accounts for 78%. Oxygen follows, accounting for 20% of its volume, with argon less than 1%. The remainder is composed of particulates and trace gases, including water vapor.
Although there is an enormous amount of hydrogen contained in Earth's crust and in the waters of the oceans, the free hydrogen in the air is only about 55 parts per million by volume. Because it readily combines with a number of other elements, concentrations are quickly dissipated. Any free hydrogen will rise rapidly into the atmosphere, to be ionized into space : the lighter elements such as hydrogen and helium readily escape the pull of gravity. (Nitrogen and oxygen are heavy enough to be held more readily.)
Earth. Its atmosphere is appropriate for all ages.
We dont, we breath nitrogen and oxygen...but only the oxygen gets used by our bodies.
The element that makes up about 70 percent of the air you breathe is nitrogen. Nitrogen constitutes approximately 78 percent of Earth's atmosphere, making it the most abundant gas. The remaining components include oxygen, argon, carbon dioxide, and trace gases. Oxygen, while essential for human respiration, only accounts for about 21 percent of the atmosphere.
The thermosphere comprises only a tiny fraction of Earth's atmosphere and is mainly composed of oxygen and nitrogen molecules. The percentage of oxygen in the thermosphere is very low, typically less than 0.1%.
We know that nitrogen (at about 78%) and oxygen(at about 20 %) are the most abundant gases in the atmosphere. By inspection, it's obvious that there is only a couple of percent for all the other gases combined.
Mars has an atmosphere, though it is different than our atmosphere here on Earth. The atmosphere of Mars is thin, cold, and dry and contains much less oxygen than the atmosphere of Earth. The oxygen content of the Martian atmosphere is only 0.13 percent, compared with 21 percent in Earth's atmosphere. Carbon dioxide makes up 95.3 percent of the gas in the atmosphere of Mars. It also contains nitrogen and argon and very small amounts of water and methane. Additionally, the atmospheric pressure on Mars is only about 1/100 that of Earth's!
Earths atmosphere is rich in Oxygen, some 21% of the air is Oxygen. There is oxygen on other planets, but the percentage comes nowhere close to this. The percentage of Oxygen in earths atmosphere is thought to have been much higher in the past, before animals were about, but after the arrival of plants.
No, they're not. In fact, about 78% of the Earth's atmosphere is nitrogen.
No there is also nitrogen (78%), carbon dioxide and other rare gases in the atmosphere.
One component of the Earth's atmosphere is nitrogen, which makes up about 78% of the atmosphere. Other key components include oxygen (21%) and trace amounts of gases like carbon dioxide, argon, and water vapor.
No, the Nitrogen in the air has probably always been there (because nitrogen is rather inert), but originally Earths atmosphere was reducing (it had no free Oxygen) and probably contained large amounts of CO2 and hydrocarbons. The present atmosphere on Earth is the product of biological processes which have slowly introduced free Oxygen into the Oceans and then the atmosphere - life made Earth habitable for life!
Only one. The one we walk, talk and live on. 78% nitrogen, 21% Oxygen.
The oxygen in Earth's atmosphere comes from photosynthesis, which is carried out by plants and algae. Earth is the only planet known to have life, which is the only way we know of that would cause a planet to have an oxygen-rich atmosphere. Oxygen can form from the chemical breakdown of water via sunlight, but only in trace amounts.