Troposphere
The layer of the atmosphere that contains carbon dioxide and water vapor is the troposphere. It is the lowest layer of the atmosphere and where most weather events occur.
The layer of the atmosphere that contains the most water vapor is the troposphere, the lowest layer of the atmosphere where most weather phenomena occur. Water vapor concentration decreases with height in the atmosphere as temperature decreases.
The troposphere is the layer of the atmosphere that contains the most water vapor. This is the layer closest to the Earth's surface and where weather events occur.
The troposphere is the layer of the atmosphere that contains about 90 percent of the water vapor. This is the lowest layer of the atmosphere where weather phenomena occur and where most of Earth's clouds and precipitation are formed.
The layer in the atmosphere that contains the most water vapor and gases is the troposphere. This is the layer closest to Earth's surface and where most weather phenomena occur.
The layer of the atmosphere that contains carbon dioxide and water vapor is the troposphere. It is the lowest layer of the atmosphere and where most weather events occur.
The layer of the atmosphere that contains the most water vapor is the troposphere, the lowest layer of the atmosphere where most weather phenomena occur. Water vapor concentration decreases with height in the atmosphere as temperature decreases.
The troposphere is the layer of the atmosphere that contains the most water vapor. This is the layer closest to the Earth's surface and where weather events occur.
The troposphere is the layer of the atmosphere that contains about 90 percent of the water vapor. This is the lowest layer of the atmosphere where weather phenomena occur and where most of Earth's clouds and precipitation are formed.
The layer in the atmosphere that contains the most water vapor and gases is the troposphere. This is the layer closest to Earth's surface and where most weather phenomena occur.
The troposphere is the layer of the atmosphere that contains about ninety percent of Earth's water vapor. This is the lowest layer of the atmosphere where weather events occur, and it extends from the Earth's surface up to an average height of about 11 miles.
Vapors goes in the atmosphere.
through evaporation
Yes, water vapors enter in the atmosphere.
Water vapors goes in the atmosphere.
The troposphere is the only layer of the atmosphere that contains significant amounts of water vapor and carbon dioxide. This is the layer closest to the Earth's surface, extending up to around 10-15 kilometers in altitude.
There is no one layer. The throphsphere is the closest layer to earth, and associated with cold fronts, and thunder storms. The Stratosphere is the second most closest to earth, and is associated with warm fronts (usually a steady rain for a day or so). Then there is the Ionosphere, the most highest clouds which is Ice particles that contain no water vapors that will fall to earth.