No, it's the other way around: atmosphere needs gravity to stay on a planet. Artificially, pressurized compartments can maintain atmosphere though. Such is the case on the International Space Station.
The outer zone of Earth's atmosphere is called the exosphere. It is the highest layer of the Earth's atmosphere, blending into outer space. The exosphere is where some satellites orbit and where atmospheric particles can escape into space.
The Exosphere is the layer in the atmosphere that is closest to outer space.
The region beyond Earth's atmosphere is known as outer space or simply space. This area is vast and contains stars, planets, comets, asteroids, and other celestial bodies. It is a near-vacuum environment with little to no atmosphere.
The outermost layer of the atmosphere is called the exosphere. It is the transition zone where Earth's atmosphere gradually thins out and merges with the vacuum of outer space. In the exosphere, particles are widely dispersed and the few remaining molecules can escape into space.
hi koleSPACE
The layer of the atmosphere that is considered outer space is called the exosphere. This is the uppermost layer of the atmosphere, where the air is extremely thin and gradually transitions into the vacuum of space.
There is no layer above the exosphere. The exosphere is the outermost layer of the Earth's atmosphere and transitions into outer space.
The layer of the atmosphere that merges into outer space is the exosphere. This is the outermost layer of the Earth's atmosphere where the air is very thin and gradually blends into the vacuum of space.
The outer zone of Earth's atmosphere is called the exosphere. It is the highest layer of the Earth's atmosphere, blending into outer space. The exosphere is where some satellites orbit and where atmospheric particles can escape into space.
That depends on what you mean by "outer space". The moon is outside the Earth's atmosphere and therfore "in space" but it is orbiting the Earth and therfore hardly "outer".
In outer space, Earth's atmosphere will not interfere.
Not quite; outer space means space beyond the Earth's atmosphere. The universe includes everything (including the Earth) - so you and I live in the universe, but not in outer space.
The thermosphere is the outer layer of the earth's atmosphere. It extends from 80 kilometers above the earth's surface to outer space.
The Exosphere is the layer in the atmosphere that is closest to outer space.
The Exosphere. Beyond it is outer space.
What planets are out there and if there atmosphere livable.
the exosphere.