10 POINTS TO THE FiRST PERSON?

the first person to give me all the definitions/meanings of these words gets 10 points automatically

Ozone –
Stratosphere –
Troposphere –
Mesosphere –
Tropopause –
Thermosphere –
Atmospheric pressure –
Heat –
Ionosphere –
Temperature –
Aurora –
Green House effect –
Radiant energy –
Electromagnetic radiation –
Heat capacity –
Conduction –
Convection –

5 Responses to this post.

  1. Math Geek's Gravatar

    Posted by Math Geek on 02.10.09 at 2:51 pm

    Ozone –form of oxygen

    Stratosphere – the region of the Earth’s atmosphere between the troposphere and mesosphere, from 10 km/6 mi to 50 km/30 mi above the Earth’s surface.

    Troposphere – lowest layer of atmosphere

    Mesosphere – the layer of the Earth’s atmosphere in which temperature decreases rapidly, located between the stratosphere and thermosphere

    Tropopause – boundary between troposphere and stratosphere

    Thermosphere – the region of the atmosphere above the mesosphere in which temperature steadily increases with height, beginning at about 85 km/53 mi above the Earth’s surface

    Atmospheric pressure –

    Heat – energy perceived as temperature

    Ionosphere – ionized layers in upper atmosphere

    Temperature – degree of heat

    Aurora – northern or southern lights

    Green House effect – Heat being trapped in the earths ozone, causing global warming

    Radiant energy – electromagnetic waves

    Electromagnetic radiation –radiation such as X-rays, light, microwaves

    Heat capacity – heat that raises temperature one degree

    Conduction – transmission of energy

    Convection –circulatory motion in liquid or gas

  2. Chandramohan P.R's Gravatar

    Posted by Chandramohan P.R on 02.10.09 at 2:51 pm

    read encyclopadea

  3. musickid1111's Gravatar

    Posted by musickid1111 on 02.10.09 at 2:51 pm

    Could you just give me the ten points?

  4. A. H.'s Gravatar

    Posted by A. H. on 02.10.09 at 2:51 pm

    google –> define: ________

  5. Mac's Gravatar

    Posted by Mac on 02.10.09 at 2:51 pm

    just google or wikipedia each word

Respond to this post

You must be logged in to post a comment.