The Earth's atmosphere is a relatively thin
layer of gases that surounds the planet. The atmosphere is retained
by Earth's gravity. The mixture of gases that is found on Earth today
is commonly called air. Beside gases,
the atmosphere also contains very minute quantities of
microscopically small suspended
particles of solid and liquid (called aerosols), which includes things like dust, pollen, and
cloud droplets. Gases are composed of individual molecules that are not
chemically bonded together. The gas molecules and suspended aerosols are
very tiny and have very little mass. Thus, they have very little weight on
Earth compared with the solid and liquid substances that compose the Earth's
ground surface. In essence, the larger and heavier solids and liquids sink to the bottom, and
the gasses (the atmosphere) floats to the top and becomes the outer layer surrounding
the Earth. Not all planets have atmospheres of gas surrounding them; yet many other planets
have much more massive atmospheres than the Earth. Living on the surface of the
Earth (at the bottom of the atmospere), we have become so adapted to our particular
atmosphere that we cannot survive more than a few minutes without it. Just as fish
need to be surrounded in an environment of water to survive, we must be surrounded in an
environment of air. And anywhere we go, e.g., under water, outer space, etc., we
must have air with us.
Meteorology is the study of the atmosphere and the processes (such as cloud formation, lightning, and the movement of the wind) that cause what we refer to as the "weather". Most of the world's weather systems and their related features, including clouds and rain, develop in the lowest layer of the atmosphere, called the troposphere. Such weather systems, or patterns of air movement, develop as a result of the flow of heat from warmer regions of the Earth near the equator to colder regions nearer the poles. The air, and the heat it carries however, does not flow in a straight line, because of the Earth's rotation. As a consequence, the air flow is deflected, forming the swirling patterns of air circulation we observe on Earth.
If the earth were the size of a basketball, its atmosphere would be thinner than a piece of paper. The atmosphere does not have an abrupt, absolutely definable top. It is most dense at the Earth's solid surface and becomes thinner and thinner as one moves upward, eventually fading into outer space. For humans, the habitable atmosphere (where the air is dense enough to breathe) extends only to about 20,000 ft (~4 miles) above sea level.
Despite its relative thinness, our existance is completely dependent upon the atmosphere. Essential functions of the atmosphere include:
The atmosphere also influences our existance in several non-life essential ways:
The material that makes up the atmosphere is mostly in the form of a gas. A gas is one of three basic forms of matter.