Pressure in atmosphere: Difference between revisions
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Models how the pressure of the air changes with altitude. | Models how the pressure of the air changes with altitude. | ||
Ideal gas law | |||
<math>P = \frac{\rho}{M} R T</math>, where pressure <math>P</math> is a function of <math>n, T, V</math>, thus <math>P=P(n,T,V)</math> and the hydrostatic assumption <math>dP = - \rho g dz</math> are needed to derive this. | |||
=== Simplified model from Weather.gov === | === Simplified model from Weather.gov === |
Revision as of 17:11, 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
Consider the function in GY91's BMP280-3.3, eg at https://startingelectronics.org/tutorials/arduino/modules/pressure-sensor/
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.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._Standard_Atmosphere
NASA Global Reference Atmospheric Models GRAM
Barometric formula
Models how the pressure of the air changes with altitude.
Ideal gas law , where pressure is a function of , thus and the hydrostatic assumption are needed to derive this.
Simplified model from Weather.gov
https://www.weather.gov/media/epz/wxcalc/pressureAltitude.pdf