Chapter 22 The Atmosphere

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Chapter 22 The Atmosphere

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Chapter 22 The Atmosphere. 2 important functions served by our atmosphere are: it protects Earth’s surface from the sun’s radiation AND it helps regulate the temperature of Earth’s surface. Without our atmosphere, we would likely die from radiation or heat. Composition of the Atmosphere. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Chapter 22 The Atmosphere

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Chapter 22The Atmosphere

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• 2 important functions served by our atmosphere are: it protects Earth’s surface from the sun’s radiation AND it helps regulate the temperature of Earth’s surface.

• Without our atmosphere, we would likely die from radiation or heat.

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• Permanent: • Nitrogen-78%• Oxygen-21%, • Others - 1%

• Variable: • Water vapor (H2O) • Carbon dioxide (CO2) • Ozone (O3)• Particulates (dust &

pollution)

Composition of the Atmosphere

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• Oxygen comprises 21% of Earth’s atmosphere. • Natural processes maintain the chemical

balance of oxygen in the atmosphere.• Oxygen is continuously being cycled.• 6 ways oxygen is removed from the

atmosphere– 1. Animals, 2. bacteria, 3. plants remove it for life

processes– 4. Fires, 5. burning fuel, 6. chemical weathering of

rocks

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Parts of Atmosphere important to weather

Water Vapor- as water evaporates from oceans, lakes, streams, and soil, it enters air as water

vapor.Transpiration

-the life process by which plants and animals give off water vaporCondensation & precipitation

-removes water vapor as it enters the atmosphere

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• 3 factors that affect the percentage of water vapor in the air– Time of day– Location– Season

– Dry air has less than 1% water– Moist air may contain up to 4% water

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Water Vapor Imagery

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Ozone– Ozone high in the atmosphere is good – Absorbs harmful UV rays– Ozone here is formed naturally– 3 oxygen molecules = O3

– CFC’s break down good ozoneand cause the hole in the ozonelayer. This allows more of the sun’sradiation to heat the earth (globalwarming)

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- Ozone low in the atmosphere is bad- creates smog- made by humans

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Particulates- Volcanic dust, ash from fires, pollen- Absorb water and helps to form clouds- Absorbs/reflects sunlight

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Atmospheric Pressure• Holds gases of the

atmosphere near Earth’s surface.

• The weight of the air above a point . Exerted equally in all directions.

• Measured with a barometer

• Standard Atmospheric Pressure = 1 atm or 760 mm of mercury or 1000mb

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• Earth’s gravity keeps 99% of the total mass of the atmosphere within 32km of Earth’s surface.

• Because the pull of gravity is not as strong as it is at higher altitudes, the air molecules are farther apart and exert less pressure.

• ***This is why atmospheric pressure changes with altitude!**

• As altitude increases, pressure decreases.

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• Besides altitude, two other factors that can cause changes in air pressure:• Differences in temperature• Amount of water in the air

• At sea level, when temperature increases, pressure decreases.

• Water molecules have less mass than nitrogen or oxygen. When air has a lot of water vapor in it, the mass of the water is less than the nitrogen/oxygen it displaced. This is why moist air is less dense than dry air is.

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Atmospheric pressure variation

with altitude

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Measuring Pressure

Mercurial Barometer-Tube filled with mercury-air pressure pushes on mercury from bottom-causes mercury to rise and fall

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Aneroid Barometer- Metal expands and

contracts with changes in pressure

- Causes pointer to move so pressure can be read

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Barograph- Recording aneroid

barometer- Keeps track of pressure

over several days

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Layers of the Atmosphere

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Troposphere

• Weather Sphere• Lowest Layer• Temperature decreases with height at constant

rate• Most clouds• Most water vapor• Most airplanes fly here• TROPOPAUSE: upperboundary of troposphere

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Stratosphere

• Ozone Layer• Found between troposphere and mesosphere

• Increase Temp with height because ozone absorbs UV– STRATOPAUSE – upperboundary of stratosphere

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Mesosphere

• Coldest layer of atmosphere• Temperature decreases to coldest point at the

mesopause (upper boundary of mesosphere)• (-90⁰C)• Many meteors burn up

in this layer.

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Thermosphere

• Air is very thin. - Uppermost layer of atmosphere• Temperature increases due to absorption of solar

energy by nitrogen and oxygen• Satellites orbit here• MESOPAUSE: lower region

of thermosphere

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Ionosphere – part of the thermosphere• Electrically charged layer• AM radio waves reflect off of here• Causes auroras – phenomena caused by

interactions between solar radiation & ionosphere

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