Transcript Atmosphere

Atmosphere
I. Layers of the atmosphere
A.Layers of the Atmosphere
1. Troposphere
2. Stratosphere
3. Mesosphere
4. Thermosphere*
* split into the Ionosphere
and the Exosphere
4
Mesopause
3
Stratopause
2
1
Atmosphere
B. Description of Atmosphere Layers
1.Troposphere
a. Tropo means “turning” or changing
b. extends from the earth’s surface from 12 kilometers in altitude
c. weather changes
d. COOLING TREND - temperature drops/cools as you go up
2. Stratosphere
a. extends from the Tropopause to an altitude of 50 kilometers (32
kilometers thick)
b. strong, steady winds
c. few weather changes
d. WARMING TREND - warms as you go up
e. contains the ozone layer – oxygen molecules that absorb
ultraviolet radiation
Atmosphere
3. Mesosphere (Middle Layer)
a. rises from the Stratopause to 80 kilometers (30
kilometers thick)
b. COOLING TREND - temperature falls/drops as you go up
c. Protects Earth from meteors – they burn up here
d. Coldest part of the atmosphere
• Thermosphere (Outermost layer)
a. rises from Mesopause to 300+ kilometers
b. WARMING TREND - temperature rises as you go up
(hottest layer)
c. Splits into the Ionosphere (80-550 km) and the
exosphere (above 550 km)
d. Meteors Enter here
Atmosphere
Gases in the Atmosphere (DRY AIR)
1. Nitrogen
2. Oxygen
3. Argon
4. Carbon Dioxide
5. All Others
78%
21%
0.9%
0.03%
0.01%
nitrogern
oxygen
argon
Carbon dioxide
all otheres
Atmosphere
II. Air Quality
A.Sources of Pollutants – some occur naturally, but
many are the results of human activity
1. Natural Sources – forest fires, soil erosion, dust
storms, wind carries mold and pollen, and volcanic
eruptions
2. Human Activities – most pollutants occur from the
burning of fossil fuels (cars and factories), farming,
and construction
B. Smog and Acid Rain – caused by burning of fossil fuels
C. Improving Air Quality – state and federal governments
have passed laws to reduce air pollution