the layers of the atmosphere in order are troposphere, stratosphere, mesosphere, thermosphere, and exosphere
No, the place where the troposphere ends is called the tropopause. The ionosphere is a region in the Earth's upper atmosphere where ions and electrons are present and can affect the propagation of radio waves.
There are five named layers. They are listed below in order from the closest to the Earth and the farthest.TroposphereStratosphereMesosphereThermosphere (including ionosphere)Exosphere
thermosphere
Troposphere and stratosphere are the minor layers of Earth's atmosphere. The troposphere is where weather occurs, and it is the closest to the Earth. The stratosphere is the second closest and where planes fly. It is 40 kilometers thick, and the troposphere is 12 kilometers thick.
yes
That is false.
The Ionosphere is above the Troposphere and above the Stratospere and mesosphere and beside the thermosphere and Exosphere.
No, the atmosphere is divided into the troposphere, stratosphere, mesosphere, thermosphere, and exosphere. The ionosphere is a region within the thermosphere where gas molecules become ionized by solar radiation, while the exosphere is the outermost layer of Earth's atmosphere where the air is extremely thin and merges with outer space.
thermosphere
the layers of the atmosphere in order are troposphere, stratosphere, mesosphere, thermosphere, and exosphere
Troposphere, Stratosphere, Mesosphere, Thermosphere, Ionosphere, Exosphere
The ionosphere and the exosphere.
The troposphere, stratosphere, and mesosphere are not contained within the ionosphere. The ionosphere is located within the thermosphere and parts of the exosphere, which are layers above the mesosphere.
No, the place where the troposphere ends is called the tropopause. The ionosphere is a region in the Earth's upper atmosphere where ions and electrons are present and can affect the propagation of radio waves.
The Earth's first three layers of the atmosphere, starting from the surface, are the troposphere, stratosphere, and mesosphere. The troposphere is where most weather occurs, the stratosphere contains the ozone layer that protects us from the sun's harmful rays, and the mesosphere is where meteors burn up upon entering the atmosphere.
We seem to neglect the ionosphere nowadays. In Ye Olde Times (1950's) the atmosphere consisted of the Troposphere, the Stratosphere and the Ionosphere. Now it's Mesosphere, Thermosphere and Exosphere (for the last one). I guess we could say with some certainty that the Ionosphere is ABOVE the Stratosphere.