as altitude increases temperature decreases
As altitude increases, the temperature usually decreases in the troposphere, which is the layer of the atmosphere where weather occurs. This relationship is known as the lapse rate. The altitude of a base cloud can vary depending on the temperature and humidity of the air mass it forms in.
The four minor layers of the Earth's atmosphere are the tropopause, stratopause, mesopause, and exosphere. These layers mark the boundaries between the main layers of the atmosphere and have distinct characteristics based on temperature, composition, and altitude.
Temperature and altitude are inversely proportional in the troposphere. This means that as one increases, the other decreases. Approximately 165 meters up in the troposphere is equivalent to a 1 degree Celsius drop.
The division of Earth's atmosphere into layers is based primarily on changes in temperature with altitude. The layers are the troposphere, stratosphere, mesosphere, thermosphere, and exosphere, with each layer characterized by its unique temperature profile and composition. These layers are determined by the balance between the absorption of solar radiation and the emission of infrared radiation by gases in the atmosphere.
The temperature in the mesosphere decreases with altitude, reaching its lowest point at the mesopause, the boundary between the mesosphere and thermosphere. This cooling effect is due to the diminishing density of gas molecules in this region.
stephen gwapo kaayo
Science!
A: There is a direct relationship between altitude and temperature. As altitude increases there is less air available to remove the dissipated heat therefore locally the temperature rises but environment temperature as a whole decreases. I don't see any relationship with any noise with altitude
stephen gwapo kaayo
stephen gwapo kaayo
ako nga nagtatanong eh...
Its known as either a temperature lapse or a temperature inversion. Hope this helps! :)
The thermosphere is the layer of the atmosphere that lies between the mesosphere and the exosphere. It is characterized by increasing temperatures with altitude and is where the auroras occur.
As altitude increases, the temperature usually decreases in the troposphere, which is the layer of the atmosphere where weather occurs. This relationship is known as the lapse rate. The altitude of a base cloud can vary depending on the temperature and humidity of the air mass it forms in.
The four minor layers of the Earth's atmosphere are the tropopause, stratopause, mesopause, and exosphere. These layers mark the boundaries between the main layers of the atmosphere and have distinct characteristics based on temperature, composition, and altitude.
Normally, temperature decreases as altitude increases. In a temperature inversion, the temperature increases as altitude increases, up to the level of air that is causing the inversion. See "Temperature change as altitude increases?" for info on how temperature normally decreases with altitude when there is not a temperature inversion.The rate at which the temperature goes down is down 1.1 degrees celsius for every 500 feet you go up.
The stratosphere's temperature increases as altitude increases. The mesosphere's temperature decreases as it's altitude increases. This is helpful