- #36
Graeme M
- 325
- 31
DrClaude said:Compressing a gas heats it, but a gas under pressure (whatever that means, as a gas always has a pressure) does not produce heat.
DrClaude, is that the case in an atmosphere? A gas in a gravitational field is attracted by gravity. In the case of the Earth's atmosphere, this would increase the density of the gasses closer to the ground and hence the pressure wouldn't it. As gravity is the agent for that process, wouldn't the atmosphere be constantly in a state of compression? Even though the air may be free to move and for high and low pressure regions to form, on average the air is being compressed by the air higher in the atmosphere.