Characteristics of the Atmosphere
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Transcript Characteristics of the Atmosphere
23.1
The
atmosphere is a layer of gasses and tiny
particles.
The study of the atmosphere is called
meteorology.
Studies weather and climate.
Weather
is the general condition of the
atmosphere and includes temperature, air
movements, and moisture content.
The general weather conditions over many
years is climate.
The
atmosphere is a mixture of chemical
elements and compounds.
The most abundant are carbon dioxide and
water vapor.
Water vapor is added to the air by
evaporation that comes from the oceans.
Moist
air contains as much as 4% water vapor.
Dry air has less than 1%,
Ozone is important because it protects the
earth’s inhabitants by absorbing UV rays.
Ozone has 3 oxygen atoms per molecule.
Animals
bacteria and plants remove oxygen
from the air as part of their life processes.
Living things, burning, and weathering would
quickly use up most atmospheric oxygen if it
were not for various processes that add
oxygen to air.
Land and ocean plants produce large
quantities of oxygen in daylight.
Oxygen
is released as a product of
photosynthesis.
The amount of oxygen produced each year
equals that consumed by all processes.
The amount of oxygen in the air is in a state
of balance and has not changed significantly
over hundreds or thousands of years.
The
amount of nitrogen in the atmosphere is
maintained through the nitrogen cycle.
Nitrogen moves from air to the soil, to plants
and animals, and back again to the air.
Nitrogen is removed by nitrogen-fixing
bacteria.
The
bacteria change the nitrogen in the air
to a compound in the soil that is vital to the
growth of all plants.
Animals get nitrogen by eating plants and
then return it to the soil via wastes.
Due
to the pull of gravity, 99% of the total
mass of atmospheric gasses found within 32
km of the earth's surface.
There is less air at higher altitude.
The ratio of the force of the air to the area
of the surface on which it presses is called
atmospheric pressure.
There
is less pressure at higher altitudes
because there is less air.
The popping of the ears when driving through
mountains or on a plane is due to the
decreased air pressure on the outside of the
eardrum.
When pressure equalizes the popping stops.
An
instrument that measures atmospheric
pressure is called a barometer.
In a mercurial barometer pressure presses on
the liquid mercury.
The height varies with atmospheric pressure.
Standard atmopheric pressure = 760 mm of
mercury or 1 atmosphere.
The
average atmospheric pressure at sea
level is 1 atmosphere.
Official weather maps measures air pressure
in millibars (mb).
One millibar is equal to abouat .001 of
standard atmospheric pressure.
The
most common barometer used today is
called an aneroid barometer and does not
contain mercury.
Aneroid means without liquid.
When the atmospheric pressure increases the
sides of the barometer bend inward.
An
aneroid barometer can also measure
altitude above sea level.
When it used for this purpose it is called an
altimeter.
Special
instruments are needed to record the
temp.
Have recorded temps of more than 2000 C.
The lower region, 80 km – 550 km, is called
the ionosphere.
The layers of ions in this layer can reflect
radio waves back to earth.