Biology, asked by 23achamberlain, 5 months ago

The most common elements in space are hydrogen and helium. How did Earth's early atmosphere contain gases like methane and ammonia?

Answers

Answered by vishnuvardhanking200
1

Explanation:

The early atmosphere was probably mostly carbon dioxide, with little or no oxygen. There were smaller proportions of water vapour, ammonia and methane. As the Earth cooled down, most of the water vapour condensed and formed the oceans.

Earth's original atmosphere was probably just hydrogen and helium, because these were the main gases in the dusty, gassy disk around the Sun from which the planets formed. The Earth and its atmosphere were very hot. Molecules of hydrogen and helium move really fast, especially when warm.

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