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Thermosphere - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  
The thermosphere is the layer of the earth's atmosphere directly above the ... Troposphere • Stratosphere • Mesosphere • Thermosphere • Exosphere ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermosphere

thermosphere: Definition from Answers.com

  
thermosphere ( ) n. The outermost shell of the atmosphere, between the mesosphere and outer space, where temperatures increase steadily with altitude
http://www.answers.com/topic/thermosphere

The Thermosphere

  
The air is really thin in the thermosphere. ... is active, the thermosphere can heat up to 1,500°C or higher! The Earth's thermosphere also includes the region ...
http://www.windows.ucar.edu/tour/link=/earth/Atmosphere/structure_thermo.html

The Thermosphere

  
The thermosphere is directly above the mesosphere and below the exosphere. ... In the thermosphere and above, gas particles collide so infrequently that the ...
http://www.windows.ucar.edu/tour/link=/earth/Atmosphere/thermosphere.html

Climate Change Affecting Earth's Outermost Atmosphere - News Release

  
In the much thinner thermosphere, a carbon dioxide molecule absorbs energy when ... Carbon dioxide cools the thermosphere, even though it acts to warm the ...
http://www.ucar.edu/news/releases/2006/thermosphere.shtml

thermosphere

  
... the Space Shuttle does pass through the lower thermosphere, however only briefly. ... and then lower the probe into the region of the thermosphere. ...
http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/T/thermosphere.html

Thermosphere

  
Within the thermosphere temperatures rise continually to well beyond 1000°C. The ... The lower part of the thermosphere, from 80 to 550 km above the Earth's surface, ...
http://www.ace.mmu.ac.uk/eae/Atmosphere/Older/Thermosphere.html

Atmosphere - Thermosphere

  
The thermosphere has only a tiny fraction of the gases. ... The region of ionized particles is calld the iconosphere and it extends the thermosphere. ...
http://library.thinkquest.org/C005686/htmfiles/thermosphere.htm

Thermosphere/Ionosphere

  
Thermosphere/Ionosphere. Photographic plate that is also a dynamic part of ... The earth's thermosphere and ionosphere are integrated and are characterized by ...
http://homes.comet.ucar.edu/~dowens/cism/thermo_io.htm

The Thermosphere

  
The next and last layer of the atmosphere is the Thermosphere. ... The Thermosphere has no real upper limit, rather, it extends out into space to ...
http://members.tripod.com/atmosphere_guys/thermosphere.html
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 Questions 'n' Answers about 'Thermosphere' Opens New Window.

Q.How can a spaceship survive in the thermosphere???Related Search:
Earth Sciences & Geology
 I have a homework for tmrw,, the question is how can the spaceship be able to not melt in the thermosphere while the tempreture is very high????
A.Temperature may be high, but pressure is almost zero, it is almost a perfect vacuum. So there is not a lot of energy, and a spaceship's bulk is enough to absorb the heat without damage.
  

Q.Why the temperature is so hot in the Thermosphere?Related Search:
Astronomy & Space
 Why is it? what about in the exosphere and mesosphere are they hot? Why is it very hot in the Thermosphere?
A.My guess would be because of the Sun's radiation. It's a large concentration of gamma and beta radiation. Gamma being the strongest. The sun's temperature is hot enough to turn a space shuttle into nothing but molten metal if exposed to it long enough. The higher into the thermosphere you go, the hotter it gets. The mesophere is farther away from the sun thus it's colder. I hope this answers your question. Here's a link that explains everything you need to know regarding your question. [Link]  Good Question!
  

Q.What is the inner and outter radius of the troposphere, mesosphere, stratosphere, thermosphere, and exosphere?Related Search:
Earth Sciences & Geology
 I need all of the radi in order to calculate the volume of each layer of the atmosphere
A.Try this: [Link]  or this: [Link]  Trop: 0-15 Strat: 15-50 Mes: 50-90 Therm: 90-500 Ex: 500-1000
  

Q.Any chances & potentials of building a tower from the ground up 80km to the edges of the meso/thermosphere?Related Search:
Engineering
 Similar to Arthur C. Clark's Odyssey novels. A tower which can deliver cargo and living things to outer-space using clean solar or nuclear power. Is it reasonable and practical to build and withstand gravitational pull, wind and laws of physics? The building-site can be as vast as it takes in a deserted plain midway between east and west, north of Africa. No closed walls or interior design, it's just a steel railway to outer-space, going up and down at a slow 4km/hr daily transporting dozens of tons. A good 70 year plan to build with international efforts and workmanship sounds promising with a 1km yearly progress starting with a humongous 20km wide base that gradually gets narrower and faster all the way up. Advantages: faster daily delivery, cheaper less risky daily payloads for space tourism growth and travel, large spaceship parts transportation for easier assembly in low gravity outer space. Can it be done material & engineering-wise disregarding cost and time??? Example plan here: [Link] 
A.Hello, I'm very sorry for this, not actually answering your question, but it's the only way I could contact you. I really quite like your answer to my question about the photography lights, and you'll likely get a best answer for it; you seem to know what you are talking about, and if you'll have it, I'd like to ask you a couple more questions to get a little more info and clear up a bit of confusion I have. Again, I really appreciate your help. ~Scarlet~
  

Q.Why does this rather high temperature of the thermosphere not cause satellites to burn up?Related Search:
Weather
 The temp reaches about 2700 F but why doesnt it burn satellites and things?
A.The density is very low, so the few molecules which reach this high temperature have relatively little impact on the temperature of an object sailing through. Temperature is the relative motion of the molecules, right? And if I have only one molecule per cubic meter and the temperature of the substance is 2700 degrees F, what do you think happens to the satellite that happens to run into that lone molecule?
  

Q.23. Which of the following best describes the thermosphere?Related Search:
Chemistry
 a. The atmosphere is so thin that gas molecules rarely contact each other. b. Heavier gases such as hydrogen and helium stay at the bottom of the thermosphere. c. The thermosphere sits directly below the troposphere. d. Lighter gases such as nitrogen and oxygen rise to the top of the thermosphere.
A.Its "a" because of the process of elimination. "b" is stating that heavier gases such as hydrogen and Helium sink to the bottom. Hydrogen and Helium are the two lightest gases in the universe. "c" says the thermoshpere sits below the troposhpere. The thermosphere is perhaps the outermost atmospheric layer. The troposhpere is very close to the Earth. "d" says that lighter gases such as nitrogen and oxygen rise to the top. Nitrogen and Oxygen are 15 and 16 on the periodic table respectively, those are almost the heaviest a gas can be without being a liquid at normal temperatures. So "a" is correct. It's so far out there that it is barely atmospheric. Because of this, the molecules have so much space that they barely have any density and rarely contact each other. Hope this helped.
  

Q.What is the common name for the mesopause, ignorosphere, thermosphere or stratosphere?Related Search:
Earth Sciences & Geology
 common as in nonscientific media or press releases
A.atmosphere
  
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The thermosphere is the layer of the earth's atmosphere directly above the mesosphere and directly below the exosphere. Within this layer, ultraviolet radiation causes ionization.

The thermosphere, named from the Greek θερμός (thermos) for heat, begins about 90 km above the earth.[1] At these high altitudes, the residual atmospheric gases sort into strata according to molecular mass (see turbosphere). Thermospheric temperatures increase with altitude due to absorption of highly energetic solar radiation by the small amount of residual oxygen still present. Temperatures are highly dependent on solar activity, and can rise to 1,500°C. Radiation causes the atmosphere particles in this layer to become electrically charged (see ionosphere), enabling radio waves to bounce off and be received beyond the horizon. At the exosphere, beginning at 500 to 2,000 km above the earth's surface, the atmosphere mixes into space.

The few particles of gas in this area can reach 2,500°C (4532°F) during the day. Even though the temperature is so high, one would not feel warm in the thermosphere, because it is so near vacuum that there is not enough contact with the few atoms of gas to transfer much heat. A normal thermometer would read significantly below 0°C.

The upper region of this atmospheric layer is called the ionosphere.

The dynamics of the lower thermosphere (below about 120 km) are dominated by atmospheric tide, which is driven, in part, by the very significant diurnal heating. The atmospheric tide dissipates above this level since molecular concentrations do not support the coherent motion needed for fluid flow.

The International Space Station has a stable orbit within the upper part of the thermosphere, between 320 and 380 kilometers. The auroras also occur in the thermosphere.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Duxbury & Duxbury. Introduction to the World's Oceans. 5ed. (1997)


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