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7.2: Layers of the Atmosphere

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    The Earth’s atmosphere is broken down into five layers. From the Earth's surface up toward space, they are the troposphere, stratosphere, mesosphere, thermosphere, and exosphere.

    Earths five layers with key concepts indicated with pictures
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): Depiction of Earth's five layers from the surface (bottom) up toward space (top). Credit: NOAA & Mysid, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

    Troposphere

    Earth’s troposphere extends from Earth’s surface to, on average, 12 kilometers above the surface. Its height is higher at the equator and lower at Earth’s poles. It holds all the air plants and animals need and contains about 99 percent of all water vapor and aerosols. Temperatures usually decrease as you increase in altitude since most of the heat found in this layer is generated by the transfer of energy from Earth’s surface. Due to the weight of the atmosphere above it, the troposphere is most the dense layer. Additionally, most of Earth’s weather (including the existence of clouds) happens here. Most airplanes fly in this layer though they do cross over into the next layer up.

    Stratosphere

    Earth's stratosphere is located from 12 to 50 kilometers above Earth’s surface. It is most famous for containing the ozone layer (composed of a gas made of three oxygens bonded together) which protects Earth from the radiation produced by the Sun. The Sun's ultraviolet radiation is what causes temperatures in this layer to rise as you increase in altitude. At the lowest, coldest altitudes, some clouds form so it is not completely weather-free.

    Mesosphere

    Earth's mesosphere is located from 50 to 80 kilometers above Earth’s surface. Just like the troposphere, this layer gets colder as you increase in altitude and is the coldest place found in the atmosphere. This layer protects Earth as all but the largest meteors burn up here. There are essentially no clouds or water vapor.

    Thermosphere

    Earth's thermosphere is located from 80 to 700 kilometers above Earth’s surface. Temperatures increase with altitude due to the lack of matter found here. Since temperature just measures the activity of molecules, temperatures must be low if there aren't very many around. There are essentially no clouds or water vapor. As a point of interest, the International Space Station orbits in the thermosphere.

    Exosphere

    Earth's exosphere is located from 700 to 10,000 kilometers above Earth’s surface. It is the highest layer and there is even less matter here. Because of this, the layer doesn’t behave like a gas, and particles escape into space. Most of Earth's satellites orbit in this layer.


    This page titled 7.2: Layers of the Atmosphere is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by William Brune (John A. Dutton: e-Education Institute) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.