Geography, asked by nayakpk2004, 20 hours ago

Why meteors burn up in mesosphere? ​

Answers

Answered by rudhvikbathini25
0
The reason why meteors usually burn up in the mesosphere is because the air in the mesosphere is dense enough that the meteor's moving through it creates a lot of heat (unlike the ionosphere), but the meteor doesn't survive long enough to reach the even denser stratosphere, let alone the denser yet troposphere.

Please mark me as brianliest
Answered by sheikhameenafatma
1

Explanation:

The reason why meteors usually burn up in the mesosphere is because the air in the mesosphere is dense enough that the meteor's moving through it creates a lot of heat (unlike the ionosphere), but the meteor doesn't survive long enough to reach the even denser stratosphere, let alone the denser yet troposphere

mark me brainliest please

Similar questions