Air Pressure - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Air Pressure

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Measuring Air Pressure A barometer is an instrument used to measure air pressure. The most common are mercury barometer and aneroid barometers. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Air Pressure


1
Air Pressure
2
Properties of Air
  • Air contains atoms and molecules that have mass,
    so air has mass as well. Since air has mass, it
    also has other properties like density and
    pressure.
  • Density
  • Density is the amount of mass in a given volume
    (dm/v).
  • the greater mass, the greater the density.

3
Pressure
  • Pressure is the force exerted in a given area.
  • Air pressure is the result of the weight of a
    column of air pushing down on an area. The
    molecules in air push in all directions and that
    is why air pressure does not crush objects.
  • Denser air exerts more pressure than less dense
    air.

4
Measuring Air Pressure
  • A barometer is an instrument used to measure air
    pressure. The most common are mercury barometer
    and aneroid barometers.
  • Mercury barometer
  • Consists of a glass tube open at the bottom end
    and partially filled with mercury. The open end
    rests in a dish of mercury and the space in the
    tube above the mercury is a vacuum.
  • The air pressure that pushes down on the mercury
    in the dish is equal to the weight of the column
    of mercury in the tube. At sea level, the column
    is on average 76 cm high.

5
View of a Mercury Barometer
6
Aneroid Barometer
  • An aneroid barometer has an airtight metal
    chamber that is sensitive to changes in air
    pressure.
  • The thin walls of the chamber flex in and out as
    the air pressure changes, which causes the needle
    on the dial to move.

7
  • Define the terms weather and atmosphere.
  • 2. Why is the abundance of a gas in the
    atmosphere usually shown as a percentage of dry
    air?
  • 3. In decreasing order, what are the four most
    abundant gases found in dry air on earths
    atmosphere?
  • 4. What are two different processes that rely on
    oxygen? In which two forms (please include
    chemical formulas) is oxygen found in Earths
    atmosphere?

8
(No Transcript)
9
Units of Air Pressure
  • In weather reports, air pressure is usually given
    in inches of mercury. National Weather Service
    maps use millibars.
  • One inch of mercury equals 33.87 millibars. (25
    846.75)

10
Altitude and Air Pressure
  • Altitude, or elevation, is the distance above sea
    level. As altitude increases, air pressure
    decreases. As air pressure decreases, so does
    density.
  • Air at sea level has the weight of the whole
    atmosphere pushing down on it so air pressure at
    sea level is the highest.
  • At the top of a mountain the air pressure is less
    and so is airs density. This is why it is
    difficult to breathe, since there is less oxygen
    in each cubic meter of air.

11
5. How would the amount of carbon dioxide in
earths atmosphere change if there were no
plants? 6. How does water vapor in Earths
atmosphere relate to weather? 7. Describe
three ways in which Earths atmosphere makes the
Earth habitable for living organisms. 8. Why
does air exert pressure? What causes there to be
air pressure in Earths atmosphere?
12
9. What two instruments are typically used to
measure air pressure? 10. What two different
units of measure are commonly used to measure air
pressure? 11. One inch of mercury is equal
to how many millibars? Therefore, 29.5 inches of
mercury would equal how many millibars?
13
12. How are air pressure and air density
affected as altitude increases? Why does this
happen?             13. Is air pressure greater
at sea level (0 feet of elevation), or on the top
of Mount Everest (29,029 feet)?
Why?           14. Why do commercial airlines,
which typically fly at a cruising altitude of
35,000 feet, need to keep the cabins pressurized?
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