< p >在以下图片(从< a href = " https://www.space.com/8596-earth-colorful-atmospheric-layers-photographed-space.html " rel = " nofollow noreferrer " >这篇文章< / >)< a href = " https://i.stack.imgur.com/R1DlA.png " rel = " nofollow noreferrer " > < img src = " https://i.stack.imgur.com/R1DlA.png " alt = "在这里输入图像描述" / > < / > < / p > < p >他们声称橙色部分是对流层,黄色/几乎白色的部分是平流层和浅蓝色部分显然中间层而将中气层顶和热大气层之上。< / p > < p >我很确定他们搞错了。 - What is considered the "stratosphere" is far too small to be the stratosphere, even if excluding the isothermal layer.
- The alleged stratosphere has clouds in it, hence it can't be it nor even the isothermal layer alone. The "stratosphere" in the image is still part of the very troposphere and the difference in colors seems to be due to the different cloud layers only. In fact you can see to the very right that there's little difference between the alleged "stratosphere" and the troposphere; it seems to be one and the same layer.
- I guess that in fact the layer(s) called "troposphere" and "stratosphere" are both the troposphere (up to ~12 km (7.5 mi)), the light blue layer is the isothermal stratosphere layer (12-20 km (12.5 mi)) and the very dark blue layer above is the rest of the stratosphere (above 20 km to above 25 km (15.5 mi) depending on the latitude).
What are your thoughts on this and how do the layers compare to those in the images in my other question where they're imaged in broad daylight, not during sunset?