crust
The ratio of the thinnest layer to the thickest layer depends on the context. In a general sense, it could be any fraction from 0 to 1 (thinnest being 0 and thickest being 1).
The crust, more specifically the lithosphere.
The outermost layer of Earth's atmosphere is the exosphere. This layer is where the atmosphere is the thinnest, gradually transitioning into space. The exosphere is composed mostly of hydrogen and helium atoms.
The Earth's crust is the thinnest layer, ranging from about 5-70 km thick. The average density of the Earth's crust is around 2.7-3.0 g/cm³.
The outermost and thinnest layer of the Earth is called the crust. It is divided into the continental crust and the oceanic crust, with the continental crust being thicker and less dense than the oceanic crust.
The earth thinnest layer is the crust.
The thinnest layer of the atmosphere is Exosphere.
The outermost layer, called the crust, is the thinnest layer of the earth.
The atmosphere layer is the thinnest is ozone. It is contained within the stratosphere.
The thinnest layer of the Earth's crust can be found underwater.
The thinnest layer of ozone is at the poles. It is because the depletion is abundant at the poles.
No. The mantle is below the crust (what we live on), which is the thinnest layer of the earth.
The thinnest layer to the thickest layer can be written as a fraction as follows: 1/thickest layer thickness.
Exosphere
To write a fraction representing the relationship of the thickest layer to the thinnest layer, you would typically place the thickness of the thickest layer in the numerator and the thickness of the thinnest layer in the denominator. This fraction would show how many times thicker the thickest layer is compared to the thinnest layer. For example, if the thickest layer is 10 cm and the thinnest layer is 2 cm, the fraction would be 10/2, which simplifies to 5/1 or simply 5.
The thinnest layer of Earth is the Lithosphere, also commonly called the crust.
crust