Pressure in atmosphere: Difference between revisions

From wikiluntti
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P = \rho R T
P = \rho R T
</math>
</math>
== Reference atmospheric model ==
How the ideal gas properties change (mainly) as a function of altitude (etc).
=== Static atmospheric model ===
<math>\rho = \frac{MP}{RT} </math> and <math>dP = -g \rho dh</math> (see above).
=== Standard atmosphere ===
=== Isothermal-barotropic approximation and scale height ===
Temperature and molecular weight are constant: density and pressure are exponential functions of altitude.
=== The US standard atmosphere ===
More realistic temperature function, consisting of eight data points connected by straight lines, which is---of course---an approximation.
=== NASA Global Reference Atmospheric Models GRAM ===

Revision as of 16:56, 30 August 2023

Introduction

ISO2533:1975

The case in Toposhere (<10 km).

  • Lapse rate +6.5 °C/km
  • Base temp 19.0 °C
  • Base atmospheric pressure 108,900 Pa equals 1.075 atm
  • Base atmospheric density 1.2985 kg/m3

International Standard Atmosphere

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Standard_Atmosphere

Earth's atmosphere's changes in

  • Pressure
  • Temperature
  • Density
  • Viscosity or

Hydrostatic balance The ideal gas law

Reference atmospheric model

How the ideal gas properties change (mainly) as a function of altitude (etc).

Static atmospheric model

and (see above).

Standard atmosphere

Isothermal-barotropic approximation and scale height

Temperature and molecular weight are constant: density and pressure are exponential functions of altitude.

The US standard atmosphere

More realistic temperature function, consisting of eight data points connected by straight lines, which is---of course---an approximation.

NASA Global Reference Atmospheric Models GRAM