which we live.
There is no layer above the exosphere. The exosphere is the outermost layer of the Earth's atmosphere and transitions into outer space.
The exosphere is Earth's uppermost atmospheric layer. The thermosphere is the largest layer of the Earth's atmosphere and lies between the exosphere and mesoshpere. Since there is no clear boundary between the exosphere and outer space, there are some who argue that it is part of outer space. However, it does have gases that slowly drift into space, eg. hydrogen and helium throughout and some carbon dioxide and oxygen at the exobase. So, most would argue that the exosphere is part of Earth's atmosphere, and that the controversy is largely a matter of semantics, and awaits improved definition.
Exosphere
indeed it does. each successive layer contains less and less gas. (the last layer is almost like outer space actually) so yes the troposhere contains almost all atmospheric gas
No, the stratosphere is not outer space. It is a layer of Earth's atmosphere that extends from about 10 to 50 kilometers above the Earth's surface. Outer space typically starts at the Kármán line, which is about 100 kilometers above sea level.
The Exosphere is the layer in the atmosphere that is closest to outer 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.
There is no layer above the exosphere. The exosphere is the outermost layer of the Earth's atmosphere and transitions into outer space.
No. The troposphere is the lowest, and densest, layer of the atmosphere. The exosphere is the outermost, thinnest layer.
space
ionosphere
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.
The layer just before outer space is the exosphere. This is the outermost layer of Earth's atmosphere, where the air is very thin and transitions into the vacuum of space.
The outer layer
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 exosphere is Earth's uppermost atmospheric layer. The thermosphere is the largest layer of the Earth's atmosphere and lies between the exosphere and mesoshpere. Since there is no clear boundary between the exosphere and outer space, there are some who argue that it is part of outer space. However, it does have gases that slowly drift into space, eg. hydrogen and helium throughout and some carbon dioxide and oxygen at the exobase. So, most would argue that the exosphere is part of Earth's atmosphere, and that the controversy is largely a matter of semantics, and awaits improved definition.
The layer of the atmosphere closest to space is the exosphere. This layer extends from about 500 to 1,000 kilometers above the Earth's surface and gradually transitions into outer space. It is very thin and composed of very low-density gas molecules.