Suppose there is a 2 degree drop in the temp for every thousand feet that an airplane climbs into the sky if the temp on the ground, which is at sea level is 64 degrees What would be the temp

For which altitude?

To determine the temperature at a specific altitude, we can use the given information that there is a 2-degree drop in temperature for every thousand feet the airplane climbs into the sky.

First, we need to calculate how many thousand feet the airplane has climbed. If we know the altitude, we can divide it by 1000 to find the number of thousand feet. In this case, we don't have a specific altitude provided, so let's assume that the airplane has climbed 30,000 feet.

To find the temperature change, we multiply the number of thousand feet climbed by the temperature drop per thousand feet. In this case, it would be:

30 (thousand feet) * 2 (degrees drop per thousand feet) = 60 degrees

Therefore, the temperature at 30,000 feet altitude would be a drop of 60 degrees from the ground temperature of 64 degrees.

64 degrees - 60 degrees = 4 degrees

So, the temperature at an altitude of 30,000 feet would be 4 degrees.