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Basic question that I should know the answer to but sadly don't.

The lower atmosphere must rotate with the earth because of friction---at least the very bottom of it.

But what about 30 miles up? There the effects of friction are well gone. Does the upper atmosphere rotate with the earth? If so, does it trail behind (so that if on the ground we move 360 deg/day, the upper atmosphere would move 50 deg/day instead, say)?

This may be the dumbest question I've asked all year, but I frankly never thought about the upper atmosphere before, much less its dynamics.

Thanks if you can clarify!!

called2voyage
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    You should think about the very long time the Earth and its atmosphere is rotating. So not only the lower atmosphere rotates with the earth, the upper does the same. There is not only friction between the Earth surface and the atmosphere, there is also friction between different layers of the atmosphere. – Uwe Jan 09 '21 at 17:29
  • another way to ask this question: there are particles of various forms in space. At what distance from Earth do they stop rotating with Earth? If I found an atom of oxygen near Mars it is pretty much unaffected by Earth's rotation. If I found an atom of oxygen 1000 miles above ground is it likely to be rotating with Earth? – 300D7309EF17 Jan 17 '21 at 19:09