The atmosphere is divided into five layers. It is
thickest near the surface and thins out with height until it eventually merges
with space.
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1) The troposphere 
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The troposphere is the first layer above the surface and contains half
  of the Earth's atmosphere. Weather occurs in this layer. Weather in this
  layer affects our daily life. 
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Between 7 to 14 kilometres.  
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The higher, the colder.  
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2) The stratosphere 
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Many jet aircrafts fly in the stratosphere because it is very stable.
  Also, the ozone layer absorbs harmful rays from the Sun. 
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Starts at 14 to 50 kilometres. 
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The higher, the hotter. 
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3) The mesosphere. 
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Meteors or rock fragments burn up in the mesosphere. 
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Between 50 to 85 kilometres.  
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The higher, the colder. 
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4) The thermosphere. 
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The thermosphere is a layer with auroras. It is also where the space
  shuttle orbits. 
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Between 85 to 640 kilometres or higher.  
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The higher, the hotter. 
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5) The exosphere.  
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The atmosphere merges into space in the extremely thin exosphere. This
  is the upper limit of our atmosphere. 
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640 kilometres or higher. 
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