Exosphere

Exosphere
Earth atmosphere diagram showing the exosphere and other layers. The layers are to scale. From Earth's surface to the top of the stratosphere (50km) is just under 1% of Earth's radius.

The exosphere is the uppermost layer of Earth's atmosphere. In the exosphere, an upward travelling molecule moving fast enough to attain escape velocity can escape to space with a low chance of collisions; if it is moving below escape velocity it will be prevented from escaping from the celestial body by gravity. In either case, such a molecule is unlikely to collide with another molecule due to the exosphere's low density.

Contents

Earth's exosphere

The main gases within the Earth's exosphere are the lightest gases, mainly hydrogen, with some helium, carbon dioxide, and atomic oxygen near the exobase. The exosphere is the last layer before outer space. Since there is no clear boundary between outer space and the exosphere, the exosphere is sometimes considered a part of outer space.

Lower boundary

The altitude of its lower boundary, known as the thermopause and exobase, ranges from about 250 to 500 kilometres (160 to 310 mi) depending on solar activity.[citation needed] Its lower boundary at the edge of the thermosphere has sometimes been estimated to be 500 to 1,000 km (310 to 620 mi) above the Earth's surface.[citation needed] The exobase is also called the critical level, the lowest altitude of the exosphere, and is typically defined in one of two ways:

  1. The height above which there are negligible atomic collisions between the particles (free molecular flow) and
  2. The height above which constituent atoms are on purely ballistic trajectories.

If we define the exobase as the height at which upward traveling molecules experience one collision on average, then at this position the mean free path of a molecule is equal to one pressure scale height. This is shown in the following. Consider a volume of air, with horizontal area A and height equal to the mean free path l, at pressure p and temperature T. For an ideal gas, the number of molecules contained in it is:

 n = \frac{pAl} {RT}

where R is the universal gas constant. From the requirement that each molecule traveling upward undergoes on average one collision, the pressure is:

 p = \frac{m_{A}ng} {A}

where mA is the mean molecular mass of the gas. Solving these two equations gives:

 l = \frac{R T} {m_{A}g}

which is the equation for the pressure scale height. As the pressure scale height is almost equal to the density scale height of the primary constituent, and since the Knudsen number is the ratio of mean free path and typical density fluctuation scale, this means that the exobase lies in the region where \mathrm{Kn}(h_{EB}) \simeq 1.

The fluctuation in the height of the exobase is important because this provides atmospheric drag on satellites, eventually causing them to fall from orbit if no action is taken to maintain the orbit.

Upper boundary

The upper boundary of the exosphere can be defined theoretically by the altitude about 190,000 kilometres (120,000 mi), half the distance to the Moon, at which the influence of solar radiation pressure on atomic hydrogen velocities exceeds that of the Earth’s gravitational pull. The exosphere observable from space as the geocorona is seen to extend to at least 100,000 kilometres (62,000 mi) from the surface of the Earth. The exosphere is a transitional zone between Earth’s atmosphere and interplanetary space.

References

  • Gerd W. Prolss: Physics of the Earth's Space Environment: An Introduction. ISBN 3540214267

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Exosphere — Exosphère Schéma des couches de l atmosphère (à l echelle). La stratosphère ( 50 km) ne compte que pour environ 1% de l atmosphère. On considère que l exosphère (observable depuis l espace) s étend jusqu à 100 000 km. L exosphère est la dernière… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • exosphère — [ ɛgzɔsfɛr ] n. f. • 1951; de exo et (atmo)sphère ♦ Géophys. Partie la plus élevée de l atmosphère (au dessus de 750 km) où les molécules les plus légères échappent à la pesanteur et sont attirées vers l espace intersidéral. ● exosphère nom… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • exosphere — ☆ exosphere [eks′ō sfir΄, eks′əsfir΄ ] n. [ EXO + SPHERE] the outermost portion of a planet s, esp. the earth s, atmosphere, consisting of a hot layer of light atoms often moving at escape velocity …   English World dictionary

  • Exosphère — Schéma des couches de l atmosphère (à l echelle). La stratosphère ( 50 km) ne compte que pour environ 1% de l atmosphère. On considère que l exosphère (observable depuis l espace) s étend jusqu à 100 000 km. L exosphère est la dernière couche d… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • exosphere — exospherical /ek seuh sfer i keuhl, sfear /, exospheric, adj. /ek soh sfear /, n. the highest region of the atmosphere, where the air density is so low that a fast moving air molecule is more than 50 percent likely to escape from the atmosphere… …   Universalium

  • Exosphere —    The farthest region of a planet s atmosphere. In this region particles can escape into space. The exosphere of Earth is about 400 km (249 miles) above the surface …   The writer's dictionary of science fiction, fantasy, horror and mythology

  • exosphere — egzosfera statusas T sritis ekologija ir aplinkotyra apibrėžtis Tarpinė zona tarp Žemės atmosferos ir tarpplanetinės erdvės – aukščiausias išorinis atmosferos sluoksnis, prasidedantis virš termosferos (vidutiniškai 600 km aukštyje). atitikmenys:… …   Ekologijos terminų aiškinamasis žodynas

  • exosphere — noun Etymology: International Scientific Vocabulary Date: 1949 the outer fringe region of the atmosphere of the earth or a celestial body (as a planet) • exospheric adjective …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • exosphere — noun the uppermost layer of a planets atmosphere …   Wiktionary

  • exosphere — n. highest level of the atmosphere …   English contemporary dictionary

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”