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Atmospheric pressure - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  
3 Altitude atmospheric pressure variation. 4 Calculating variation with altitude ... 7 Atmospheric pressure's relation to water's boiling point. 8 Effect on ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atmospheric_pressure

Atmospheric Pressure: The force exerted by the weight of air

  
Air pressure is the force exerted on you by the weight of tiny particles of air (air molecules) ... When it's compressed, air is said to be "under high pressure" ...
http://kids.earth.nasa.gov/archive/air_pressure/index.html

NOVA Online | Everest | Atmospheric Pressure

  
Because of the many factors which affect atmospheric pressure. ... As air gets warmer it expands and becomes less dense, causing atmospheric pressure to fall. ...
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/everest/exposure/pressure.html

Atmospheric Pressure: force exerted by the weight of the air

  
Atmospheric pressure is defined as the force per unit area exerted against a ... Atmospheric pressure is measured with an instrument called a "barometer" ...
http://ww2010.atmos.uiuc.edu/(Gh)/guides/mtr/fw/prs/def.rxml

Pressure overview

  
Atmospheric pressure measurements are unique among the meteorological variables ... The day to day atmospheric pressure variability, low in summer and higher in ...
http://www-k12.atmos.washington.edu/k12/resources/mars_data-information/pressure_overview.html

7(d) Atmospheric Pressure

  
The first measurement of atmospheric pressure began with a simple experiment ... Atmospheric pressure then forced the mercury up into the tube to a level that ...
http://www.physicalgeography.net/fundamentals/7d.html

Atmospheric Pressure

  
Key idea: Atmospheric pressure is caused by the weight of the atmosphere pushing ... The average atmospheric pressure at the surface of the Earth is ...
http://nova.stanford.edu/projects/mod-x/id-pres.html

Hulu - Atmospheric Pressure

  
Show description: ... Be the first to create a thread for "Atmospheric Pressure". User Reviews (0) Be the first to create a review for "Atmospheric Pressure" ...
http://www.hulu.com/atmospheric-pressure

Pressure

  
The decrease in atmospheric pressure with height can be predicted from the barometric formula. ... The atmospheric pressure provides the force necessary to ...
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/Hbase/pman.html

Pressure - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  
Since atmospheric pressure at sea level is about 100 kPa/14.7 psi, the absolute ... For instance, if the atmospheric pressure is 100 kPa, a gas (such as helium) at ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/pressure
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 Questions 'n' Answers about 'Atmospheric pressure' Opens New Window.

Q.atmospheric pressure?Related Search:
Earth Sciences & Geology
 Why is the atmospheric pressure lower at higher altitudes? Why won't water boil when the pressure is lower?
A.At higher altitudes, there is less air pushing down from above. Thus, atmospheric pressure is lower on a mountaintop than it is at sea level. Water will boil at lower pressures, but it will boil at lower temperatures. That's why cooking times are longer, etc... in places like Denver which are at higher elevations.
  

Q.How does the atmospheric pressure at altitudes below sea level compare with atmospheric pressure at sea level?Related Search:
Physics
 How does the atmospheric pressure at altitudes below sea level compare with atmospheric pressure at sea level? The atmospheric pressure below sea level is higher. The atmospheric pressure below sea level is lower. The pressures are the same. Differences in pressures cannot be determined. Compared to the melting points of ionic compounds, the melting points of molecular solids tend to be? similar unpredictable lower higher At a certain temperature and pressure, 0.20 mol of carbon dioxide has a volume of 3.1 L. A 3.1-L sample of hydrogen at the same temperature and pressure? has the same mass contains the same number of atoms has a higher density contains the same number of molecules If the atmospheric pressure on Mt. Everest is one-third the atmospheric pressure at sea level, the partial pressure of oxygen on Everest is? one-sixth its pressure at sea level one-third its pressure at sea level one-half its pressure at sea level equal to its pressure at ^
A.How does the atmospheric pressure at altitudes below sea level compare with atmospheric pressure at sea level? The atmospheric pressure below sea level is higher. If the atmospheric pressure on Mt. Everest is one-third the atmospheric pressure at sea level, the partial pressure of oxygen on Everest is? one-third its pressure at sea level
  

Q.What happens to atmospheric pressure as you get higher up into the atmosphere? Why?Related Search:
Weather
 What happens to atmospheric pressure as you get higher up into the atmosphere? Why?
A.At sea level, pressure is equal to 1 atm. As elevation increases, pressure decreases because air gets thinner. After all, pressure is the ratio of force and area. Less air means less area, and of course lower pressure.
  

Q.What is the relationship between forces of attraction, vapor pressure, and atmospheric pressure?Related Search:
Chemistry
 If you're above sea level, vapor pressure is stronger, and atmospheric pressure is weaker. What do the forces of attraction have to do with this? If you're below sea level, vapor pressure is weaker, and atmospheric pressure is stronger. What do the forces of attraction have to do with this? I'm asking this because the boiling points different liquids depends on the vapor pressure and forces of attraction. I get that the stronger the forces of attraction take longer to boil, but how does this fit in with the above? ~studying for a chem test tomorrow. Help would be great. Thanks!
A.probably you have already done the test; however it is important to note that your question shows a conceptual mistake; in fact there is no connection between the vapor pressure and the height of the material in the gravity field; vapor pressure depends only on the temperature and the composition of the system NOT on its height; the atmospheric pressure depends on the height and so also the boiling temperature for the effect of the pressure; vapor pressure at the same temperature and composition is the same (on the contrary forces of attraction depends on the composition) so finally the decrease of the external atmospheric pressure allows to the identical vapor pressure and forces of attraction to make the liquid boils; it is the external parameter which varies NOT the internal ones
  

Q.How does atmospheric pressure affect the state of water?Related Search:
Astronomy & Space
 I'm doing a science project and there are a few questions that I need help on. 1.) How does atmospheric pressure affect the state of water? 2.) How does atmospheric pressure affect blood pressure? 3.) What is meant by the term "geologically dead" body of the solar system? 4.) What is the brightness of mars as seen from earth? I've been searching forever on the internet and I can't find answers to any of these questions. Thanks for the help guys.
A.1) it changes the points of state change. At lower pressure, the boiling point and the melting point drop down and viceversa. 2) Same as above although irrelevant since our blood doesn't change between states. It also changes our blood pressure I guess because the external (atmospheric) pressure is transmitted through our muscles to capillaries, arteries and veins. Probably the difference between systolic and diastolic pressure is higher under higher atmospheric pressure. But I'm guessing. 3) Means that there's no geological activity. No plates movement, etc. A totally stable piece of rock floating in space. 4) Reflection of the sun light.
  

Q.What are the units of measurement for atmospheric pressure, and which is easiest to use?Related Search:
Weather
 What are the units of measurement for atmospheric pressure? Which do you think is easiest to use? Explain why.
A.1 atm torr psi pascal atm is by far the easiest to use because it requires less conversion 1 atm = 760 torr but the SI unit for atmospheric pressure is pascal so if u need that there u go
  

Q.Where can you find records of historic atmospheric pressure?Related Search:
Other - Science
 I need historic atmospheric pressure data (going back as long as possible, minimum of 15 years). I've Googled all over the place, but can't seem to find anything.
A.The web page listed below contains links to a variety of archived NOAA datasets, maps and so on. Perhaps you'll find the data you need among these sources. Good luck!
  
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"Air pressure" redirects here. For the pressure of air in other systems, see pressure.

Atmospheric pressure is defined as the force per unit area exerted against a surface by the weight of air above that surface at any given point in the Earth's atmosphere. In most circumstances atmospheric pressure is closely approximated by the hydrostatic pressure caused by the weight of air above the measurement point. Low pressure areas have less atmospheric mass above their location, whereas high pressure areas have more atmospheric mass above their location. Similarly, as elevation increases there is less overlying atmospheric mass, so that pressure decreases with increasing elevation. A column of air one square inch in cross-section, measured from sea level to the top of the atmosphere, would weigh approximately 14.7 lbf. The weight of a 1 m2 (11 sq ft) column of air would be about 100 kilonewtons (equivalent to a mass of 10.2 tonnes at the surface).

Contents

[edit] Standard atmospheric pressure

The standard atmosphere (symbol: atm) is a unit of pressure and is defined as being equal to 101.325 kPa. The following non-standard units are equivalent: 760 mmHg (torr), 29.92 inHg, 14.696 PSI, 1013.25 millibars. One standard atmosphere is standard pressure used for pneumatic fluid power (ISO R554), and in the aerospace (ISO 2533) and petroleum (ISO 5024) industries.

In 1999, the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) recommended that for the purposes of specifying the properties of substances, “the standard pressure” should be defined as precisely 100 kPa (≈750.01 torr) or 29.53 inHg rather than the 101.325 kPa value of “one standard atmosphere”.[1] This value is used as the standard pressure for the compressor and the pneumatic tool industries (ISO 2787).[2] (See also Standard temperature and pressure.) In the United States, compressed air flow is often measured in "standard cubic feet" per unit of time, where the "standard" means the equivalent quantity of moisture at standard temperature and pressure. However, this standard atmosphere is defined slightly differently: temperature = 20 °C (68 °F), air density = 1.225 kg/m³ (0.0765 lb/cu ft), altitude = sea level, and relative humidity = 20%. In the air conditioning industry, the standard is often temperature = 0 °C (32 °F) instead. For natural gas, the petroleum industry uses a standard temperature of 15.6 °C (60.08 °F), pressure 101.56 kPa (14.73 psi).

[edit] Mean sea level pressure

15 year average MSLP for JJA (top) and DJF (bottom)
JJA: June July August
DJF: December January February

Mean sea level pressure (MSLP or QFF) is the pressure at sea level or (when measured at a given elevation on land) the station pressure reduced to sea level assuming an isothermal layer at the station temperature.

This is the normally given in weather reports on radio, television, and newspapers or on the Internet. When barometers in the home are set to match the local weather reports, they measure pressure reduced to sea level, not the actual local atmospheric pressure. See Altimeter (barometer vs. absolute).

The reduction to sea level means that the normal range of fluctuations in pressure is the same for everyone. The pressures which are considered high pressure or low pressure do not depend on geographical location. This makes isobars on a weather map meaningful and useful tools.

The altimeter setting in aviation, set either QNH or QFE, is another atmospheric pressure reduced to sea level, but the method of making this reduction differs slightly. See altimeter.

  • QNH: The barometric altimeter setting which will cause the altimeter to read airfield elevation when on the airfield. In ISA temperature conditions the altimeter will read altitude above mean sea level in the vicinity of the airfield
  • QFE: The barometric altimeter setting which will cause an altimeter to read zero when at the reference datum of a particular airfield (generally a runway threshold). In ISA temperature conditions the altimeter will read height above the datum in the vicinity of the airfield.

QFE and QNH are arbitrary Q codes rather than abbreviations, but the mnemonics "Nautical Height" (for QNH) and "Field Elevation" (for QFE) are often used by pilots to distinguish them.

Average sea-level pressure is 101.325 kPa (1013.25 mbar) or 29.921 inches of mercury (inHg) or 760 millimeters (mmHg). In aviation weather reports (METAR), QNH is transmitted around the world in millibars or hectopascals (1 millibar = 1 hectopascal), except in the United States and in Canada where it is reported in inches (or hundredths of inches) of mercury. (The United States and Canada also report sea level pressure SLP, which is reduced to sea level by a different method, in the remarks section, not an internationally transmitted part of the code, in hectopascals or millibars [3]. However, in Canada's public weather reports, sea level pressure is instead reported in kilopascals [1], while Environment Canada's standard unit of pressure is the same [2] [3].) In the weather code, three digits are all that is needed; decimal points and the one or two most significant digits are omitted: 1013.2 mbar or 101.32 kPa is transmitted as 132; 1000.0 mbar or 100.00 kPa is transmitted as 000; 998.7 mbar or 99.87 kPa is transmitted as 987; etc. The highest sea-level pressure on Earth occurs in Siberia, where the Siberian High often attains a sea-level pressure above 1087.0 mbar. The lowest measurable sea-level pressure is found at the centers of tropical cyclones.

[edit] Altitude atmospheric pressure variation

This plastic bottle was closed at approximately 2,000 m altitude, then brought back to sea level. It was crushed by air pressure.

Pressure varies smoothly from the earth's surface to the top of the mesosphere. Although the pressure changes with the weather, NASA has averaged the conditions for all parts of the earth year-round. The following is a list of air pressures (as a fraction of one atmosphere) with the corresponding average altitudes. The table gives a rough idea of air pressure at various altitudes.

fraction of 1 atm average altitude
(m) (ft)
1 0 0
1/2 5,486 18,000
1/3 8,376 27,480
1/10 16,132 52,926
1/100 30,901 101,381
1/1000 48,467 159,013
1/10000 69,464 227,899
1/100000 96,282 283,076

[edit] Calculating variation with altitude

See also: Barometric formula

There are two different equations for computing the average pressure at various height regimes below 86 km (or 278,400 ft). Equation 1 is used when the value of standard temperature lapse rate is not equal to zero and equation 2 is used when standard temperature lapse rate equals zero.

Equation 1:

{P}=P_b \cdot \left[\frac{T_b}{T_b + L_b\cdot(h-h_b)}\right]^{\textstyle \frac{g_0 \cdot M}{R^* \cdot L_b}}

Equation 2:

{P}=P_b \cdot \exp \left[\frac{-g_0 \cdot M \cdot (h-h_b)}{R^* \cdot T_b}\right]

where

P = Static pressure (pascals)
T = Standard temperature (kelvins)
L = Standard temperature lapse rate (kelvins per m)
h = Height above sea level (meters)
R * = Universal gas constant: 8.31432×10³ N·m / (kmol·K)
g0 = Standard gravity (9.80665 m/s²)
M = Molar mass of Earth's air (28.9644 g/mol)

Or converted to English units:[4]

where

P = Static pressure (inches of mercury)
T = Standard temperature (kelvins)
L = Standard temperature lapse rate (kelvins per ft)
h = Height above sea level (feet)
R * = Universal gas constant (using feet and kelvins and gram moles: 8.9494596×104 kg·sq ft·s-2·K-1·kmol-1)
g0 = Standard gravity (32.17405 ft/s²)
M = Molar mass of Earth's air (28.9644 g/mol)

The value of subscript b ranges from 0 to 6 in accordance with each of seven successive layers of the atmosphere shown in the table below. In these equations, g0, M and R* are each single-valued constants, while P, L, T, and h are multivalued constants in accordance with the table below. (Note that according to the convention in this equation, L0, the tropospheric lapse rate, is negative.) It should be noted that the values used for M, g0, and R * are in accordance with the U.S. Standard Atmosphere, 1976, and that the value for R * in particular does not agree with standard values for this constant.[5] The reference value for Pb for b = 0 is the defined sea level value, P0 = 101325 pascals or 29.92126 inHg. Values of Pb of b = 1 through b = 6 are obtained from the application of the appropriate member of the pair equations 1 and 2 for the case when h = hb + 1.:[5]

Subscript b Height Above Sea Level Static Pressure Standard Temperature
(K)
Temperature Lapse Rate
(m) (ft) (pascals) (inHg) (K/m) (K/ft)
0 0 0 101325 29.92126 288.15 -0.0065 -0.0019812
1 11,000 36,089 22632 6.683245 216.65 0.0 0.0
2 20,000 65,617 5474 1.616734 216.65 0.001 0.0003048
3 32,000 104,987 868 0.2563258 228.65 0.0028 0.00085344
4 47,000 154,199 110 0.0327506 270.65 0.0 0.0
5 51,000 167,323 66 0.01976704 270.65 -0.0028 -0.00085344
6 71,000 232,940 4 0.00116833 214.65 -0.002 -0.0006097

[edit] Local atmospheric pressure variation

Hurricane Wilma on 19 October 2005 – 88.2 kPa in eye

Atmospheric pressure varies widely on Earth, and these changes are important in studying weather and climate. See pressure system for the effects of air pressure variations on weather.

Atmospheric pressure shows a diurnal (twice-daily) cycle caused by global atmospheric tides. This effect is strongest in tropical zones, with amplitude of a few millibars, and almost zero in polar areas. These variations have two superimposed cycles, a circadian (24 h) cycle and semi-circadian (12 h) cycle.

[edit] Atmospheric pressure based on height of water

Atmospheric pressure is often measured with a mercury barometer, and a height of approximately 760 mm (30 inches) of mercury is often used to teach, make visible, and illustrate (and measure) atmospheric pressure. However, since mercury is not a substance that humans commonly come in contact with, water often provides a more intuitive way to conceptualize the amount of pressure in one atmosphere.

One atmosphere (101.325 kPa or 14.7 lbf/sq in) is the amount of pressure that can lift water approximately 10.3 m (33.9 ft). Thus, a diver at a depth 10.3 meters under water in a fresh-water lake experiences a pressure of about 2 atmospheres (1 atm for the air and 1 atm for the water). This is also the maximum height to which a column of water can be drawn up by suction.

Low pressures such as natural gas lines are sometimes specified in inches of water, typically written as w.c (water column) or " W.G (inches water gauge). A typical gas using residential appliance is rated for a maximum of 14 w.c. which is approximately 0.5 atmosphere.

Non-professional barometers are generally aneroid barometers or strain gauge based. See Pressure measurement for a description of barometers.

[edit] Atmospheric pressure's relation to water's boiling point

Although water is generally considered to boil at 100°C (212°F), water actually boils when the vapor pressure is equal to the atmospheric pressure around the water. [6] Because of this, the boiling point of water is decreased in lower pressure and raised at higher pressure. This is why baking cookies at elevations above 3,500 feet above sea level requires special baking directions. [7]

[edit] Effect on human health

Some studies have shown that atmospheric pressure can adversely effect human health, though many question whether the small natural variations caused, for example by weather fronts, are significant enough to affect humans.[8]

[edit] See also

  • Plenum
  • NRLMSISE-00
  • Barometric formula
  • International Standard Atmosphere - a tabulation of typical variation of principal thermodynamic variables of the atmosphere (pressure, density, temperature etc.) with altitude, at mid latitudes.
  • Barotrauma physical damage to body tissues caused by a difference in pressure between an air space inside or beside the body and the surrounding gas or liquid.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ IUPAC.org, Publications, Standard Pressure (20 kB PDF)
  2. ^ Compressor.co.za, May 2003 Newsletter
  3. ^ Sample METAR of CYVR Nav Canada
  4. ^ Mechtly, E. A., 1973: The International System of Units, Physical Constants and Conversion Factors. NASA SP-7012, Second Revision, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Washington, D.C.
  5. ^ a b U.S. Standard Atmosphere, 1976, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., 1976. (Linked file is very large.)
  6. ^ Vapor Pressure
  7. ^ Crisco - Articles & Tips - Cooking Tips - High Altitude Cooking
  8. ^ What are the health effects of small air pressure fluctuations?

[edit] References

  • US Department of Defense Military Standard 810E
  • Burt, Christopher C., (2004). Extreme Weather, A Guide & Record Book. W. W. Norton & Company ISBN 0-393-32658-6
  • U.S. Standard Atmosphere, 1962, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., 1962.

[edit] External links

[edit] Experiments



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