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Friday 13 September 2013

Atmosphere

ATMOSPHERE 
Atmosphere,  mixture  of  gases  surrounding  any celestial  object  that  has  a  gravitational  field strong  enough  to  prevent  the  gases from escaping;  especially  the  gaseous  envelope  of Earth.  The  principal  constituents  of  the atmosphere  of  Earth  are  nitrogen  (78 percent)  and  oxygen  (21  percent).  The  atmospheric gases  in  the  remaining  1  percent  are  argon (0.9  percent),  carbon  dioxide (0.03  percent), varying  amounts  of  water  vapor,  and  trace
amounts  of  hydrogen,  ozone,  methane, carbon monoxide,  helium, neon, krypton, and xenon. 
The mixture of gases in the air today has had 4.5 billion years in which to evolve. The earliest atmosphere must have consisted of volcanic emanations alone. Gases that erupt from volcanoes today, however, are mostly a mixture of water vapor, carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, and nitrogen, with almost no oxygen. If this is the same mixture that existed in the early atmosphere, then various processes would have had to operate to produce the mixture we have today. One of these processes was condensation. As it cooled, much of the volcanic water vapor condensed to fill the earliest oceans.  Chemica

l reactions would also have occurred. Some carbon dioxide would have reacted with the rocks of Earth‘s crust to form carbonate  minerals,  and  some  would  have  become  dissolved  in  the new  oceans.  Later,  as  primitive  life  capable  of  photosynthesis evolved in the oceans, new marine organisms began producing oxygen. Almost all the free oxygen in the air today is believed to have formed  by  photosynthetic  combination  of  carbon  dioxide  with  water. About  570  million  years  ago,  the  oxygen  content  of  the atmosphere  and  oceans  became high  enough  to  permit  marine  life  capable  of  respiration.  Later,  some  400  million  years ago,  the atmosphere contained enough oxygen for the evolution of air breathing land animals. 
The water-vapor content of the air varies considerably, depending on the temperature and relative humidity. With 100 percent relative humidity, the water vapor content of air varies from 190 parts per million (ppm) at -40°C (-40°F) to 42,000 ppm at 30°C (86°F). Minute quantities of other gases, such as ammonia, hydrogen sulfide, and oxides of sulfur and nitrogen, are temporary constituents of the atmosphere in the vicinity of volcanoes and are washed out of the air by rain or snow. Oxides and other pollutants added to the atmosphere by industrial plants and motor vehicles have become a major concern, however, because of  their damaging effects in the form of acid rain. In addition, the strong possibility exists that the steady increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide, mainly as the result of the burning of fossil fuels since the mid 1800s, may affect Earth‘s climate. Similar concerns are posed by the sharp increase in atmospheric methane. Methane levels have risen 11 percent since 1978. About 80 percent of the gas is produced by decomposition in rice paddies, swamps, and the intestines of grazing animals, and by tropical termites. Human activities that tend to accelerate these processes include raising more livestock and growing more rice. Besides adding to the greenhouse effect, methane reduces the volume of atmospheric hydroxyl ions, thereby curtailing the atmosphere‘s ability to cleanse itself of pollutants. 
The study of air samples shows that up to at least 88 km (55 mi) above sea level the composition of the atmosphere is substantially the same as at ground level; the continuous stirring produced by atmospheric currents counteracts the tendency of the heavier gases to settle below the lighter ones. In the lower atmosphere, ozone, a form of oxygen with three atoms in each molecule, is normally present in extremely low concentrations. The layer of atmosphere from 19 to 48 km (12 to 30 mi) up contains more ozone, produced by the action of ultraviolet radiation from the sun. Even in this layer, however, the percentage of ozone is only 0.001 by volume. Atmospheric disturbances and downdrafts carry varying amounts of this ozone to the surface of Earth. Human activity adds to ozone in the lower atmosphere, where it becomes a pollutant that can cause extensive crop damage. 
The  ozone  layer  became  a  subject  of  concern  in  the  early  1970s,  when  it  was  found that  chemicals  known  as  chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs),  or  chlorofluoromethanes,  were rising into  the  atmosphere  in  large  quantities  because  of  their  use  as  refrigerants  and as propellants in aerosol dispensers. The concern centered on the possibility that these compounds, through the action of sunlight,could chemically attack and destroy stratospheric ozone, which protects Earth‘s surface from excessive ultraviolet radiation. As a result, industries in the United States, Europe, and Japan replaced chlorofluorocarbons in all but essential uses. 
The atmosphere may be divided into several layers. In the lowest one, the troposphere, the temperature as a rule decreases upward at the rate of 5.5°C per 1,000 m (3°F per 3,000 ft). This is the layer in which most clouds occur. The troposphere extends up to about 16 km (about 10 mi) in tropical regions (to a temperature of about -79°C, or about -110°F) and to about 9.7 km (about 6 mi) in temperate latitudes (to a temperature of about -51°C, or about -60°F). Above the troposphere is the stratosphere. In the lower stratosphere the temperature is practically constant or increases slightly with altitude, especially over tropical regions. Within the ozone layer the temperature rises more rapidly, and the temperature at the upper boundary of the stratosphere, almost 50 km (about 30 mi) above sea level, is about the same as the temperature at the surface of Earth. The layer from 50 to 90 km (30 to 55 mi), called the mesosphere, is characterized by a marked decrease in temperature as the altitude increases.  From investigations of the propagation and reflection of radio waves, it is known that beginning at an altitude of 60 km (40 mi), ultraviolet radiation, X rays, and showers of electrons from the sun ionize several layers of the atmosphere, causing them to conduct electricity; these layers reflect radio waves of certain frequencies back to Earth. Because of the relatively high concentration of ions in the air above 60 km (40 mi), this layer, extending to an altitude of about 1000 km (600 mi), is called the ionosphere. At an altitude of about 90 km (55 mi), temperatures begin to rise. The layer that begins at this altitude is called the thermosphere, because of the high temperatures reached in this layer (about 1200°C, or about 2200°F). 
The region beyond the thermosphere is called the exosphere, which extends to about 9,600 km (about 6,000 mi), the outer limit of the atmosphere. 
The density of dry air at sea level is about 1/800 the density of water; at higher altitudes it decreases rapidly, being proportional to the pressure and inversely proportional to the temperature. Pressure is measured by a barometer and is expressed in millibars, which are related to the height of a column of mercury that the air pressure will support; 1 millibar equals 0.75 mm (0.03 in) of mercury. Normal atmospheric  pressure  at  sea  level  is  1,013 millibars,  that  is,  760  mm  (29.92  in)  of  mercury.  At  an  altitude  of  5.6  km  (about  3.5 mi) pressure falls to about 507 millibars (about 380 mm/14.96 in of mercury); half of all the air in the atmosphere lies below this level. The pressure  is  approximately  halved  for  each  additional increase  of  5.6  km  in  altitude.  At  80  km  (50  mi)  the  pressure  is  0.009  millibars (0.0069 mm/0.00027 in of mercury). 
The troposphere and most of the stratosphere can be explored directly by means of sounding balloons equipped with instruments to measure the pressure and temperature of the air and with a radio transmitter to send the data to a receiving station at the ground. Rockets carrying radios that transmit meteorological-instrument readings have explored the atmosphere to altitudes above 400 km (250 mi). Study of the form and spectrum of the polar lights gives information to a height possibly as great as 800 km (500 mi). 

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