Understanding air pressure
The weight of the air pressing down
on the Earth, the ocean and on the air below causes air pressure. Earth's
gravity, of course, causes the downward force that we know as
"weight." Since the pressure depends upon the amount of air above the
point where you're measuring the pressure, the pressure decreases as you go
higher.
Air pressure is related to its
density, which is related to the air's temperature and height above the Earth's
surface.
Air pressure changes with the
weather. In fact, it's one of the most important factors that determines what
the weather is like. You can do some basic weather forecasting by using the
wind and barometric pressure.
Air pressure is also called barometric
pressure because barometers are used to measure it.
The National Weather Service reports
surface air pressure in inches of mercury, while air pressure aloft is reported
in millibars, also known as hectopascals (hPa). Scientists generally use
hectopascals to measure air pressure.
In the rest of the world,
measurements are usually given in hectopascals, although you'll sometimes see
them in centimeters of mercury, especially on older barometers.
The term hectopascals is replacing
the term millibars. The hectopascal is a direct measure of pressure, like
pounds per square inch, but in the metric system. Since the measurement is in
the metric system, 1,000 millibars equal one bar. A bar is a force of 100,000
Newtons acting on a square meter, which is too large of a unit to be a
convenient measure of Earth's air pressure.
Inches of mercury and centimeters of
mercury measure how high the pressure pushes the mercury in a barometer.
The use of direct pressure
measurements goes back to the late 19th century. This was when the Norwegian meteorologist
Vilhelm Bjerknes, a leader in making meteorology a mathematical science, urged
weather services to use direct pressure measurements because they can be used
in the formulas that describe the weather, unlike measures of the height of the
mercury in a barometer.
Air pressure and your body
Changes in air pressure, especially
rather quick changes, can affect your body. The most obvious of these are the
discomfort or even pain you feel in your ears when your gain or lose altitude
rather quickly, such as in an aircraft, or even a fast elevator that goes up or
down several floors.
Air pressure changes can also be
felt in other ways. The links below have more on what happens:
Air pressure corrections
When you read a barometer the
reading directly from it is the "station pressure."
Two things affect the barometer's
reading, the high or low air pressure caused by weather, and the air pressure
caused by the station's elevation, or how high it is above sea level.
No matter what weather systems are
doing, the air's pressure decreases with height. If you're trying to draw a
weather map of air pressure patterns, you need a way to remove the effects of
the station's elevation. That is, you want to see what the pressure would be at
the station if it were at sea level. Otherwise, all high-elevation locations
would be mapped as having low pressure.
You need to calculate, sea-level
pressure, which is defined as: "A pressure value obtained by the
theoretical reduction of barometric pressure to sea level. Where the Earth's
surface is above sea level, it is assumed that the atmosphere extends to sea
level below the station and that the properties of that hypothetical atmosphere
are related to conditions observed at the station."
To do this, you have to take into
account the barometric reading at the station, the elevation above sea level,
and the temperature.
Another kind of barometric reading
is the altimeter setting, which aircraft use. It's defined as: "The
pressure value to which an aircraft altimeter scale is set so that it will
indicate the altitude above mean sea level of an aircraft on the ground at the
location for which the value was determined." For it, all you need is the
station pressure and the elevation, you can ignore the temperature.
How pressure decreases with altitude
As you go higher in the air, the
atmospheric pressure decreases.
The exact pressure at a particular
altitude depends of weather conditions, but a couple of approximations and a
formula can give you a general idea of how pressure decreases with altitude.
A rule of thumb for the altimeter
correction is that the pressure drops about 1 inch of mercury for each 1,000
foot altitude gain. If you're using millibars, the correction is 1 millibar for
each 8 meters of altitude gain. These rules work quite well for elevations or
altitudes of less than two or three thousand feet.
The standard atmosphere is a table
giving values of air pressure, temperature and air density for various
altitudes from the ground up. You can think of these values as averages for the
entire Earth over the course of a year.
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