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  • Through the history of space exploration so far, weve debated where the earth’s atmosphere

  • ends, and space begins. And your surprise for the day is that according to newly unearthed

  • observations, our atmosphere is way bigger than we ever thought. Like it goes past the

  • moon. Weve mostly defined space as the vast expanse

  • of the rest of the universe that exists past the Kármán Line, which exists roughly

  • 100 kilometers above mean sea level. Now according to Federation Aeronautique Internationalethe

  • organization officially in charge of determining these kinds of rulesafter the Kármán

  • line, you are in space. The reasoning behind this is after 100 kilometers,

  • the earth’s atmosphere becomes too thin for a conventional aeronautic vehicle like

  • an airplane to stay in flight without reaching orbital velocityso you have to switch to

  • more specialized astronautic vehicles. But if you thought this was gonna be simpleit’s

  • not. Even though the FAI’s Karman line designation is commonly recognized, there’s actually

  • no official international consensus over where space technically begins. Some astrophysicists

  • say it should actually be 80 kilometers above the mean sea level because of the way that

  • orbital momentum acts on satellite objects. NASA and the U.S. air force also define space

  • as starting about 80 kilometers above the Earth’s surface, and those who cross that

  • line officially become astronauts. OK, so the definition of space is up in the

  • air, but what even is the atmosphere? Yes, it’s the bubble of gases that shield and

  • insulate the earth from the aggressive radiation of the sun and the cold dark depths of space,

  • but like most complex things, it’s got layers: The troposphere, with all our fun weather

  • and necessary gases for breathing and surviving; The stratosphere, where commercial airlines

  • fly when possible because there’s usually less turbulence; the mesosphere, where most

  • meteors burn up and the highest layer at which clouds can form; Then comes the thermosphere,

  • which is where that tricky Kármán line livesthis is where astronauts begin to

  • experience weightlessness, and is where the ISS orbits! That means that technically, our

  • most commonly defined line of where space begins is still in Earth’s atmosphere.

  • And then finally, there’s the exosphere, the final layer between us and outer space,

  • made up of super spaced out hydrogen and helium atoms slowly dissipating out to nothing up

  • to 200,000 kilometers away from earth’s surface...or so we thought. We actually haven’t

  • previously really known where the exosphere ends and outer space begins, we just know

  • that those extremely sparse gases gradually fade out into a vacuum.

  • But a team of astronomers has recently dropped a total bombshell. When the cloud of gases

  • in the exosphere reflects the Sun’s UV light, it creates a luminosity, a glow that we can

  • see, called the geocorona. These new observations of the geocorona indicate that the exosphere

  • may extend up to 630,000 kilometers away from earth—a distance that includes the moon!

  • So technically, the moon is in the Earth’s atmosphere!

  • This realization is thanks to an instrument called the Solar Wind Anisotropies Instrument,

  • or SWAN. SWAN was able to measure and analyze the full extent of the geocorona, making us

  • think about our atmosphere in a whole new way.

  • See, sunlight interacts with the hydrogen atoms of the exosphere at a wavelength called

  • Lyman-alpha radiation, which is something astrophysicists can measure when looking at

  • cosmological structures in deep space. Observing Lyman alpha radiation can tell us about the

  • distribution of matter in space, and help us think about how the universe expanded.

  • It’s also a wavelength that’s absorbed by the inner layers of our atmosphere, so

  • we can’t see it from Earth. But from SWAN’s position in space, it was able to see and

  • measure both--and it extended far beyond what we were expecting.

  • So while this discovery is remarkable in many ways, not the least of which is that technically

  • no one has ever left earth’s atmosphereit won’t change space travel for us in most

  • practical ways. It’s far more important for informing the future of our observations

  • of space. The new results also show that sunlight compresses

  • the hydrogen atoms of the exosphere, producing pockets of denser geocorona, with the corresponding

  • Lyman alpha radiation, depending on the sun’s position. So space telescopes that make measurements

  • from within the confines of the exosphere will need to take a new Lyman-alpha baseline

  • level--and the bunching of the geocorona--into account when observing the night sky...hopefully

  • letting us peer further, and with greater accuracy.

  • One last amazing thing about this piece of information is that this isn’t even new

  • researchthese observations were made by SWAN in the late 90’s, and were only JUST

  • dug out of the archives for further analysis!! What other startling discoveries could be

  • lurking in a cupboard somewhere? Make sure to subscribe for all your space updates, like

  • this video here. Thanks so much for watching and I’ll see you next time on Seeker.

Through the history of space exploration so far, weve debated where the earth’s atmosphere

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