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A soap bubble, for example.
Mars has an atmosphere, though it is different than our atmosphere here on Earth. The atmosphere of Mars is thin, cold, and dry and contains much less oxygen than the atmosphere of Earth. The oxygen content of the Martian atmosphere is only 0.13 percent, compared with 21 percent in Earth's atmosphere. Carbon dioxide makes up 95.3 percent of the gas in the atmosphere of Mars. It also contains nitrogen and argon and very small amounts of water and methane. Additionally, the atmospheric pressure on Mars is only about 1/100 that of Earth's!
Mars, It has a thin atmosphere of carbon dioxide. Earth and Venus have relatively thick atmospheres due to their larger size, while Mercury's mass is not large enough to sustain any stable atmosphere.
The mass of the earth is 5.97 x 1024 kilograms. That's 5,970,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 grams. I was thinking: Is this constant, or does it change when a lot of people put on a lot of weight and get really heavy ? But then I realized, everything we take in or let out was always a part of the earth to begin with. So nothing that plants, animals, or human beings does can change the earth's mass. Only tons of meteors entering the atmosphere and staying in the atmosphere or on the surface (add to the mass), and gas molecules boiling out of the atmosphere and leaving the earth completely (reduce the mass).
Titan, the only moon with an atmosphere.
Ozone layer is the layer. It contains tiny fraction of atmospheric mass.
Yes the thermosphere only contains a tiny fraction of atmospheric mass.
A tiny piece of something.
A soap bubble, for example.
The troposphere is the layer of the atmosphere that contains people and weather. The troposphere is the only layer of the atmosphere that contains breathable air.
The atmosphere of Earth contains about 78.08% nitrogen. There has been no other place found that has this nitrogen in abundance, with Mars having only 3% as a remainder of its thin and low-pressure atmosphere.
There can be no answer. 200 grams can be expressed as a fraction only in the context of another quantity of mass.
The Troposphere is the only layer that contains the mixture that supports life.
Highly unlikely as it is only 12km in diameter and therefore does not enough mass to "hold" on to an atmosphere
No. While the concentration of oxygen in a cloud on Earth is much higher than it is in the sun, the total amount is much lower. A single cloud contains only a tiny portion of Earth's atmosphere, which is itself a tiny fraction of Earth's mass. The sun is about 330,000 times the mass of Earth and is about 1% oxygen, so even at such a low concentration, the mass of oxygen in the sun is about 3,300 times the total mass of Earth.
No indeed. The moon Titan has a nitrogen-rich atmosphere which contains a little bit of methane. Titan is the only moon in the solar system to have an atmosphere!
There can be no answer to the question. 200 grams can be expressed as a fraction only in the context of another quantity of mass.