- #1
Doug1943
- 37
- 5
All the popular definitions of 'air pressure' that I have seen say: "air pressure is the weight of the column of air above you". This seems misleading to me.
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I believe it is much more correct to say that air pressure is the collective force of squillions of air molecules slamming into you. There is a relationship between the number of molecules above the molecules hitting you, each one being pulled towards the Earth's surface and slamming into the one below, but saying that the resulting pressure on you 'is' the 'weight of the air above you' is one of those pat answers that discourage children from thinking -- just a form of words that actually does not explain anything. (The kind of 'science answer' that drove Richard Feynman into a fury, and rightly so.)
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Consider: I stand in a cylinder which is, say, 100 km tall , closed at the bottom, open at the top. There is a column of air above me. Now, remove all of the air, except for one molecule. Is there any 'weight' at all on me? Add a second molecule. And a third... when does the 'weight' start? If it were a column of ball bearings, balanced on my head, then it would be correct to say that the pressure on the top of my head was due to their weight -- each ball bearing's downward force adding to the next one's -- .. .and removing, or adding, a ball bearing would indeed change the total weight of the column (a wee bit).
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But fluids are different. Now reduce the height of the cylinder (of air) from 100 km, to 5 meters. And close the top of the cylinder as well. Make the cylinder very very strong, and 'airtight'. Lift this closed cylinder up a few kilometers above the Earth's surface. The air pressure outside the cylinder goes down. But inside the cylinder, it remains the same.
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Can we now say that the air pressure inside the cylinder is due to the 'weight' of the air above it? (Same experiment: what causes the air pressure inside the International Space Station? Weight?) If I have a column of bricks on top of me -- yes, the pressure on me is due to their weight. If I get inside a strong box, with the bricks on top, I no longer feel their pressure. But the same is not true for air , or any fluid.
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[However, surely the mechanism of pressure must be different for gases, on the one hand, and liquids, on the other. (Let's postpone discussion of pressure in liquids vs gases to a second thread, later.)]
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Comments?
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I believe it is much more correct to say that air pressure is the collective force of squillions of air molecules slamming into you. There is a relationship between the number of molecules above the molecules hitting you, each one being pulled towards the Earth's surface and slamming into the one below, but saying that the resulting pressure on you 'is' the 'weight of the air above you' is one of those pat answers that discourage children from thinking -- just a form of words that actually does not explain anything. (The kind of 'science answer' that drove Richard Feynman into a fury, and rightly so.)
- - -
Consider: I stand in a cylinder which is, say, 100 km tall , closed at the bottom, open at the top. There is a column of air above me. Now, remove all of the air, except for one molecule. Is there any 'weight' at all on me? Add a second molecule. And a third... when does the 'weight' start? If it were a column of ball bearings, balanced on my head, then it would be correct to say that the pressure on the top of my head was due to their weight -- each ball bearing's downward force adding to the next one's -- .. .and removing, or adding, a ball bearing would indeed change the total weight of the column (a wee bit).
- - -
But fluids are different. Now reduce the height of the cylinder (of air) from 100 km, to 5 meters. And close the top of the cylinder as well. Make the cylinder very very strong, and 'airtight'. Lift this closed cylinder up a few kilometers above the Earth's surface. The air pressure outside the cylinder goes down. But inside the cylinder, it remains the same.
- - -
Can we now say that the air pressure inside the cylinder is due to the 'weight' of the air above it? (Same experiment: what causes the air pressure inside the International Space Station? Weight?) If I have a column of bricks on top of me -- yes, the pressure on me is due to their weight. If I get inside a strong box, with the bricks on top, I no longer feel their pressure. But the same is not true for air , or any fluid.
- - - -
[However, surely the mechanism of pressure must be different for gases, on the one hand, and liquids, on the other. (Let's postpone discussion of pressure in liquids vs gases to a second thread, later.)]
- - -
Comments?