Another example of a top-of-the-atmosphere special layer is of course the ozone (O3) layer, continually produced by ultraviolet light but unstable. These "surface" phenomena don't have anything to do with how nitrogen, oxygen, and uranium hexafluoride are distributed throughout the atmosphere.
Bruce On Thu, Jun 14, 2012 at 1:35 AM, Greg Sonnenfeld <[email protected]> wrote: > Ah i was mentioning the exosphere because it was very relevant to the > question about layering/mixing of gases. Hydrogen is on the most outer > layer as would be expected. I do imagine alot of this comes from space ions > as well. > > >>
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