Atmospheric pressure, also known as barometric pressure (after the barometer), is the pressure within the atmosphere of Earth. The standard atmosphere (symbol: atm) is a unit of pressure defined as 101,325 Pa (1,013.25 hPa; 1,013.25 mbar), which is equivalent to 760 mm Hg, 29.9212 inches Hg, or 14.696 psi. The atm unit is roughly equivalent to the mean sea-level atmospheric pressure on Earth; that is, the Earth's atmospheric pressure at sea level is approximately 1 atm.
In most circumstances, atmospheric pressure is closely approximated by the hydrostatic pressure caused by the weight of air above the measurement point. As elevation increases, there is less overlying atmospheric mass, so that atmospheric pressure decreases with increasing elevation. Pressure measures force per unit area, with SI units of pascals (1 pascal = 1 newton per square metre, 1 N/m2). On average, a column of air with a cross-sectional area of 1 square centimetre (cm2), measured from mean (average) sea level to the top of Earth's atmosphere, has a mass of about 1.03 kilogram and exerts a force or "weight" of about 10.1 newtons, resulting in a pressure of 10.1 N/cm2 or 101 kN/m2 (101 kilopascals, kPa). A column of air with a cross-sectional area of 1 in2 would have a weight of about 14.7 lbf, resulting in a pressure of 14.7 lbf/in2.
From what I know, the pressure of a gas is due to the collisions of its molecules against a surface. So I don't understand why atmospheric pressure is measured by taking the weight of all the air molecules above a surface including the ones that aren't contacting it. Gases have plenty of space...
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I saw this video: ... it is about water pump.
I want to know how it works. First straw is above the water surface, second is below the water surface. To the straw below the water surface goes watter because force of gravity act on it. This is why air column increases and makes it...
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I have two simple questions.
1) I don't understand atmospheric force. I read that it occurs by heaviness of air column and it act perpendicular to any surface.
I can't imagine it. Where is the air column in experiment with glass and papper? Why the atmospheric force act...
If I hold the top end of a straw filled with water, the water stays in the straw which is due to the atmospheric pressure. How come this effect is not seen in upside down cups? Should the atmospheric pressure keep the liquid inside it within the cup since the other end is closed? Also, the...
Homework Statement
There are certain problems involving pressure where you are required to add the atmospheric pressure to solve the problems, i have done some problems where i work everything out but get the answer wrong because i did not add the atmospheric pressure. How can i overcome this...
Atmospheric pressure decreases as altitude increases. The pressure can be approximated by the formula P(h) = 101.33(0.9639)^\frac{h}{1000} where P is pressure in kilopascals and h is height in feet.
a) What is the pressure at sea level (0 feet)?
b) At what altitude will the air pressure be...
Hi,
I know air can be made ionized and glow at low atmospehres like in vacuum tubes at high voltages. But is it possible to somehow make a glow discharge(not corona discharge out of leaking sharp edges) at atmospheric pressures?. Except of Ionization radiation- I haven't heared or read of...
can we produce electricity from atmospheric pressure...if yes,
please suggest any processes or methods by which we can generate electricity from atmospheric pressure..
Homework Statement
A scuba diver can withstand pressures up to 4 atmospheres without risk of getting the bends.
Homework Equations
What is the maximum safe diving depth?
The Attempt at a Solution
4 atmospheric pressure = 40 meters down in water.
Thus the maximum safe diving depth...
In the absence of turbulent mixing, the partial pressure of each constituent of air would fall off with height above sea level in Earth's atmosphere as Pi=P0ie−Migz/RT where Pi is the partial pressure at the height z, P0i is the partial pressure of component i at sea level, g is the acceleration...
when you close a bottle , why doesn't it collapse on itself ? shouldn't it since the pressure outside the bottle is greater than the pressure inside
i know this is not the case , but how do gasses inside the bottle have the same pressure as the atmospheric ?
1. Suppose a cube of mass m is lying at rest on a horizontal surface. The area of one face of the cube is A. For the equlibrium of cube no net force acts on it. If we consider the vertical direction then the contact force N should be equal to the force due to gravity plus the force due to...
The problem statement
Recently I came across this problem and couldn't understand it.
I know that in situation 1, the length of the specific place will be decreased; In situation 2, it will be increased.
Can someone help me here? Thanks first!
When the Clausius-Clapeyron equation for saturation vapor pressure over liquid water is derived via the Carnot cycle, it is usually assumed that there is only gaseous water above the liquid. The other atmospheric gases are neglected.
However, in common settings (lake, glass of water...), the...
the book says vapor pressure is independent of atmospheric pressure, if that is the case then why must the vapor pressure of a liquid be equal to the atmopheric pressure for it boils. I pictured atmospheric pressure as a column of air sitting above a liquid and therefore pushing down the gas...
Is there any way, crude as it may be, to find an equivalency between the pressure exerted on an object from layers of atmosphere and the force or energy put on an object from an explosion?
I'm trying to categorize the durability of certain things and I've gotten to a point where instead of...
This isn't home work, just a curiosity question and I'm obviously under qualified to find the answer.
Looking to approximate how the amount of of vacuum in inches of Hg negate the affects of atmospheric pressure in regards to acceleration.
We all remember when David Scott let loose the...
Hi, apologies in advance as I feel stupid for asking this, but believe me I tried googling. The typical explanation for atmospheric pressure is that there is a column of air sitting on us, creating a pressure of 101 kPa. But what if there's a ceiling above us? Now only a few feet of molecules...
How would they look like?
Being more specific and less speculative: would higher atmospheric pressure (ex. 5 atm) mean that it is easier to fly/glide because lower wingspan would allow to achieve the same lift? Or it would be actually harder, because denser atmosphere would mean higher drag...
Homework Statement
I already found A, but I keep getting wrong answers for B.
A cylinder is fitted with a piston, beneath which is a spring, as in the drawing. The cylinder is open to the air at the top. Friction is absent. The spring constant of the spring is 4300 N/m. The piston has a...
Homework Statement
If the atmospheric pressure is 745 mm Hg, what is the gas pressure in the apparatus in atm?
(Hint: the gas pressure is not equal to atmospheric pressure. Which is greater Pgas or Patm?)
Be careful with your units, 10.2 cm is equal to 102 mm
Homework Equations...
Homework Statement
The atmospheric pressure deceases exponentially with height. At 5.5 km, the pressure is half that at sea level. At what height is the pressure one eighth that of sea level?
Homework Equations
All I can think of is Pat=ρgh
I know 1 atm=101325 Pa=101.325 kPa and that this is...
From what I have read so far, the vapor pressure of a liquid is temperature dependent while it is independent of the atmospheric pressure. I am not sure why atmospheric pressure would have no effect of the vapor pressure though. For example, if a highly volatile liquid is placed in a sealed...
I have a question I long pondered and couldn't find any explanation to exactly what I want.
We all know that atmospheric pressure is due tu gravity acting upon everything on earth. this pressure act from all directions on all our body molecules.
However in space there is no gravity, no...
Homework Statement
I have a Torricelli barometer column filled with mercury.
Situation 1: Temperature1 = 20° C. Height: 0,760 m. Outer pressure:1 atm.
Situation 2: Temperature2 = 35° C. Height: 0,762 m.
Coefficient of termic dilation in the interval (T1, T2): 18,2
*10^-5 (°C)^-1
Find...
Ok, so 1 atm≈101,300 Pa that is 101,300 Newtons per square meter, presumably at sea level. If we look at the force in terms of lbs this is 101,300 N* (.225 lb/1 N)≈22,792 lb.
The pressure per square meter seems pretty intense to me when I thought of it in terms of force. I didn't ask my...
Hello All,
It is said that Earth has an envelope of gases (air) surrounding it and that due to gravity the weight of this envelope of air exerts a force: on the surface of Earth and any thing on it. The weight of air column on any surface divided by the area of the surface is...
Say you have a giant mercury barometer. Let's suppose that the area exposed to atmospheric pressure is 1 square meter
Normal pressure at sea level is 101325 Pa
Lets say the variation in 24 hours in atmospheric pressure goes from a low of 100,000 Pa to a high of 102,000 Pa
Using...
Homework Statement
The problem is this: If T(temperature) AND P(pressure) of air increases, what can we assume about D(density)?Homework Equations
Well, I know that as temperature increases, pressure increases and vice versa. When you try this question out with the equation P=KdT it doesn't...
I am new here and I have a question about pressure. My idea about atmospheric pressure is that it is a pressure caused by the force directed downward due to the weight of the atmosphere. If that is the case, does it mean that we doesn't feel any pressure horizontally? Please correct me if I am...
Consider the following two-step process. Heat is allowed to flowout of an ideal gas at constant volume so that its pressure dropsfrom PA = 2.7 atmto 1.4 atm. Then the gas expands at constant pressure, from avolume of 6.8 L to VC = 13.1 L where the temperature reaches its originalvalue. See Fig...
What is correlation between temperature and atmospheric pressure?
For example, why does Titan have 1.6 times the atmospheric pressure of Earth despite having pretty much the same atmospheric 'weight', for lack of better term. (Total atmospheric mass times gravity.)
EDIT: Is this the right...
1. I got the correct answer but I am confused about the reasoning and want to understand the concept..
"Rank from most to least, the amount of lift on the following airplane wings: a. Area 1000 m^2 with atmospheric pressure difference of 2.0 N/m^2, b. Area 800 m^2 with atmospheric pressure...
For a given mass, as radius decreases, would atmospheric pressure increase, since surface gravity would increase? I'm assuming that atmospheric composition doesn't change.
For a planet with radius = 1.1*Earth and mass = 1.3*Earth and atmospheric molar weight within 1% of Earth's, does a...
atmospheric pressure is always exert on downward direction??
atmospheric pressure is always exerted on downward direction...but can i think soo it exerted in horizontal and also atmospheric pressure exerts from downward direction is it true?
Homework Statement
If the atmospheric pressure is 0.975 atm, what is the pressure of the enclosed gas when its an open-tube manometer and the h is 52 cm?
The Attempt at a Solution
I know you would have to set up a proportion. I was thinking
.975 / 1 = x / 760
x = 741 torr
But...
The pressure exerted against the ground by an elephant's weight distributed evenly over its four feet is less than 1 atmosphere. Why, then, would you be crushed beneath the foot of an elephant, while you're unharmed by the pressure of the atmosphere?
I have a question about my watch which has been bugging me for a little while, and I was wondering if anyone could enlighten me as to the physics behind it.
One day a while back I went out for a run in the rain and some water got into my watch, behind the glass. I only noticed because it had...
The normal atmospheric pressure is 760 mm of Hg. But the normal human blood pressure is around 120/80 mm only. In that case how equilibrium of our body is achieved? For any vessel to retain its original shape its inside pressure and outside pressure should remain equal. If the outside pressure...
Ignoring normal variations, I've always been told that atmospheric pressure is...
1 Atm = 101,325 Pa
However, Wikipedia says atmospheric pressure was re-defined in 1999 to be exactly 100 kPa. This would mean that atmospheric pressure is now 0.98692 Atm...
If I Make two(many) tanks to fill water each one at different height levels.
1. Fill the lowest tank with water, open it to atmosphere.
2. close the second tank and create vacuum in it. make water flow from first tank to this till it gets filled.
will this process allow me to store extra...
Homework Statement
How does the pressure at a point in a fluid vary with the depth of the point below the surface of the fluid? A bottle, full of air at atmospheric pressure, whose volume is 500 cubic centimeters, is sunken mouth downwards below the surface of a pond. How far must it be...
Homework Statement
My teache recently assigned this problem but its nothing like the atmospheric problems we've done in class. Any suggestions on where to start?
The cross section of the tube of a mercury barometer is 1 square centimeter, and when the barometric height is 760 millimeters...
Hello all, i would like to know if atmospheric pressure exists on the surface of water in a completely sealed water tank.
So, does atmoshperic pressure exist even on surfaces that are not in contact with the atmosphere, meaning in closed areas above.
Thank you.
Hello gentlemen! I'm rather new to this whole complex world we call compressed air. :) Put simply, I have spent the past 4 hours trying to find this answer anywhere and I am just not informed enough about all these numbers to get what I need to find out.
I have an air cylinder that is...
1. There are many different definitions of the location of the top of the atmosphere – the near edge of
outer space.
• Until around 1600, it was believed that the Earth’s atmosphere extended throughout space
(recall that the Earth was also considered to be the center of the Universe until...
Homework Statement
A cylinder with a frictionless piston of mass M and cross section S is placed vertically in an atmosphere of pressure p. The cylinder is rotated 180 degree so that the opening of the cylinder faces down. During the operation the temperature of the gas inside the cylinder is...