The Atmosphere and the Weather

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The energy state of a gas depends on its

  1. Temperature
  2. Pressure
  3. Density
Each of these properties of gases can be measured by instruments. The temperature and pressure of gases are very easy to measure using thermometers and barometers, while density is more difficult to measure. The instruments are said to measure the macro scale or large-scale properties of the gas. The instruments are sensitive to the motions of a very large number of individual molecules. The motion of individual gas molecules is said to take place at the micro scale. Macro scale observations are based on what we can measure, while micro scale motions are too small to measure easily (at the level of individual molecules), thus we rely on a simple model, the kinetic model, to help us understand what is going on at micro scales. Keep in mind though that macro scale and micro scale are just two different ways of viewing the same thing, i.e., the behavior of gases.

Later we will see that these three measurable properties of gases are related to each other by the ideal gas law.

For now we will first describe the macroscopic properties of gases in terms of what is going on at the molecular or microscopic level using the kinetic model. Link to page describing kinetic model.

As we describe how each of these three properties of gases can be understood using the kinetic model, we will examine how each changes in the vertical, i.e., as one moves up and down in the real atmosphere.

Temperature

Temperature is determined by the average speed of the molecules making up a substance. The higher the temperature, the faster they move. For gases, this is the random motion of the individual molecules that make up the gas. Random motion is disordered, i.e., individual molecules are equally likely to be moving in any direction. At temperatures common in Earth's atmosphere, the average speed of each molecule is approximately 1000 mi/hr. This is different from what we call "wind" which is ordered movement of air at the macro scale (basically the ordered movement of a fluid in a given direction). For example, when the windspeed is 10 mi/hr, it means that "blobs" of air are moving at 10 mi/hr, but individual molecules are still moving at an average speed of about 1000 mi/hr.

Using the concept of energy, the higher the temperature, the more energy that is possessed by the gas. It should make sense, then, that the higher the temperature, the higher the energy, and the faster the speed at which the molecules are moving.

We sense temperature by touch. Thermorecptor nerve cells in our body are sensitive to the average speed at which air molecules are moving. Similarly, when air molecules strike a thermometer, energy is transferred between the thermometer and the air. The reading on the thermometer is calibrated to read the average thermal motion of all of the air molecules that collide with it.

Often, the Earth's atmosphere is divided into several different layers that can be defined according to air temperature.

Layers of the atmosphere based on temperature

The different layers of the atmosphere are:
Troposphere:
-- Located from the surface of the Earth to approximately 11 kilometers in altitude. This is an average, the depth of the troposphere varies with time and location, range 6 - 16 km.
-- Contains about 75 % of the total mass of the atmosphere.
-- Typically, the maximum air temperature occurs near the Earth's surface and drops with increasing height at an average rate of 6.5°C per 1000 meters (or 3.6°F per 1000 ft). The reason the temperature usually decreases with increasing height is because the atmosphere is mainly heated from below by the underlying ground surface. However, it is not all that uncommon for a shallow layer of air near the ground to be slightly colder than the air immediately above it. This situation is called a temperature inversion. Inversions often form during long winter nights and persist until the sun is able to heat the ground surface.
-- Essentially all weather occurs in this layer.

Tropopause:
-- Isothermal (constant temperature) layer that exists above the troposphere. On average, it is found between about 11 and 20 kilometers.
-- Separates the troposphere from the stratosphere.
-- Acts like a "lid" on rising air motion.
-- Layer in the atmosphere where the jet stream exists.

Stratosphere:
-- Extends from 20 to 48 kilometers above the surface (average location).
-- Temperature increases with altitude because ozone gas molecules, present in this layer, absorb ultraviolet sunlight creating heat energy.
-- The layer of higher ozone concentrations, which reaches a maximum between 20 and 30 km above sea level, is also called the ozone layer. Ozone in the stratosphere protects life from harmful exposure to the sun's ultraviolet radiation. NOTE: Even though we refer to an "ozone layer", keep in mind that ozone molecules account for a very small percentage of all air molecules in the stratosphere.

Density

Air density can be defined as the number of air molecules per unit volume. Near sea level there are about 2.7x1019 molecules per cm3(cubic centimeter) or 4.4x1020 molecules per inch3. While this may seem like a lot of molecules in a small area, molecules are very small. By comparison, the number density for solids and liquids is much higher. In a gas there is lots of empty space between the individual molecules.

Air molecules are held near the earth by gravity. In other words, air has weight. Weigh an empty bag, then fill it with air, it now weighs more.

This strong, invisible force pulling down on the air (gravity) squeezes air molecules closer together, which causes their numbers in a given volume to increase (increase in number density). The more air above a level, the greater the squeezing effect (or compression).

Since air density is the number of air molecules in a given space (volume), air density is typically greatest at the surface and decreases as we move up in the atmosphere.

Pressure

From a microscopic point of view, gas pressure is caused by the collisions of gas molecules on a surface. Each individual collision provides a tiny push (or force) on the surface that it contacts. The sum total of all of these tiny forces determines the air pressure. The physical units for pressure is force per area.

The weight of the air molecules acts as a force upon the earth. The amount of force excerted over an area of surface is called atmospheric pressure or air pressure. Since the air (a gas) is a fluid, the pressure force acts in all directions, not just downward. The pressure force pushing downward due to the weight of the air is the same as the pressure force acting sideways and even upward. If you are having trouble understanding this, make an analogy with another fluid liquid water. Consider a tall glass of water. The water pressure anywhere in the glass depends on the weight of the water above (that is the deeper you move downward in the glass, the stronger the water pressure. The pressure force is not just downward because if you make a hole in the side of the glass water is forced out by the water pressure.

In the atmosphere, the air pressure at any point depends on the weight per area of the air above that point. As we climb in elevation, fewer air molecules are above us; hence, atmospheric pressure always decreases as you move upward in the atmosphere. Another way to look at it is that the air pressure at any point in the atmosphere is exactly enough to support the weight of the column of air above it. A balance exists between the gravitational force pushing air downward and the pressure force.

In-class demonstration for air pressure

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