It does, but as more air drops down, the pressure increases.
This pressure then starts to push back against the air above it.
Which is why we have atmospheric pressure at the surface, but that goes down to pretty much 0 in space.
Even in low earth orbit there are still some particles, which causes satellites and such to slow down, requiring them to fire some thrusters every once in a while.
It does, but as more air drops down, the pressure increases. This pressure then starts to push back against the air above it. Which is why we have atmospheric pressure at the surface, but that goes down to pretty much 0 in space.
Even in low earth orbit there are still some particles, which causes satellites and such to slow down, requiring them to fire some thrusters every once in a while.
Cool, thanks!
Follow up question: are there different densities in space?
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