The Thermosphere is the fourth layer of the Earth's Atmosphere. It starts at approximately 90 km above the earth and continues up to 500 km.
The Exosphere is the uppermost layer of the Earth's atmosphere. It starts at about 500-1000 km above the earth and continues up to 10000 km.
The mesosphere
The exact upper and lower boundaries of the mesosphere vary with latitude and with season, but the lower boundary of the mesosphere is usually located at heights of about 50 km above the Earth's surface and the mesopause is usually at heights near 100 km, except at middle and high latitudes in summer where it descends to heights of about 85 km.
The layer that extends 85 km above Earth into space is the Mesosphere.
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The exosphere is the layer of the atmosphere 500km above Earth. It basically marks the end of Earth's atmosphere. There are very few air molecules in the exosphere.
it is the stratosphere
the mesosphere
The Mesosphere
exosphere
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The Exosphere is the layer in the atmosphere that is closest to outer space.
mesosphere is a layer of the atmosphere is the third layer of atmosphere. It lies above the stratosphere.it extends up to the height of 80 km. Meteorites burn up in this layer on entering from the space.
exosphere
there are 5 layers of the atmosphere :-troposphere ( our layer)-stratosphere ( the layer which contains the ozone layer)-mesosphere (the coldest layer)-thermosphere (the hottest layer)-exosphere ( the layer that leaves into space)
Exosphere
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.
Excluding the magnetic layer, this would be the exosphere, since it extends all the way to space.
One -- it is all connected above ground and extends miles into space.
mesosphere is a layer of the atmosphere is the third layer of atmosphere. It lies above the stratosphere.it extends up to the height of 80 km. Meteorites burn up in this layer on entering from the space.
Putting the telescope in space means that it is above the earth's atmosphere, cloud layer and free of earth's light pollution.
The space shuttle program utilized low earth orbit, above the Earth's atmosphere.
exosphere
The ozone layer is not a basic layer of the atmosphere.Starting at the Earth's surface:tropospherestratosphere (the bottom of which contains most of the "ozone layer")mesospherethermosphereexosphere (which extends into outer space)
The International Space Station (ISS), which orbits at between 187 and 194 nautical miles (about 215 to about 223 miles), is in what is called the thermosphere. We know that this layer, which is above the mesosphere and below the exosphere, extends from about 100 kilometers (a bit over 60 miles) to 690 kilometers (a little less than 430 miles) above the surface of the earth. Links can be found below for confirmation and for additional data.
there are 5 layers of the atmosphere :-troposphere ( our layer)-stratosphere ( the layer which contains the ozone layer)-mesosphere (the coldest layer)-thermosphere (the hottest layer)-exosphere ( the layer that leaves into space)
The lowest is the troposphere, which is the layer that provides most of our weather. It contains about 80% of the Earth's air, but extends only to a height of about 11 miles (17 kilometers) at the Equator and less at the Poles. Above the troposphere is the stratosphere. It extends to a height of about 30 miles (50 kilometers) and includes the ozone layer. Above the stratosphere is the mesosphere. Meteors generally burn up in this layer, which extends to a height of about 52 miles (85 kilometers). Above the mesosphere is the thermosphere. It extends to about 430 miles (690 kilometers). The International Space Station and other low orbit satellites orbit within this layer. Space is widely accepted now as starting at 100km above sea level. The highest layer is the exosphere. This part of the Earth's atmosphere extends outward until it interacts with the solar wind. It ranges from 620 miles (1,000 kilometers) to 6,214 miles (10,000 kilometers) above the surface, where it merges with interplanetary space.