NATS 101 Atmospheric Composition and Vertical Structure
NATS 101 Atmospheric Composition and Vertical Structure
NATS 101 Atmospheric Composition and Vertical Structure
Lecture 1
Atmospheric Composition
and Vertical Structure
100 km 100 km
C = 2a
4.084 x 104 km a 6500 km
1. Permanent gases
2. Variable gases
3. Aerosols
1. Permanent gases
stable concentration in the atmosphere.
• account for about 99% of the atmospheric mass
• occur in a constant proportion in the lowest ~80 km of the
atmosphere.
N2 + O2 = 99% of atmospheric
volume below 80 km.
They are chemically active.
Oxygen:
• O2 is crucial to the existence of almost all forms of life
currently on the Earth. Its residence time is ~5000 years.
2. Variable gases
distributions vary both in time and space.
1. Permanent gases
Name two permanent gases
2. Variable gases
Name two variable gases
3. Aerosols
Name two ways aerosols form
Weather Map Symbols
Ref:- Appendix C, Aguado and Burt
48 997
32
34 247
30 65 103
42
W E
S
TEXAS
Oregon/California
Vertical Structure of the atmosphere
1. Density
2. Pressure
3. Temperature
mass
______
Density: = volume (kg/m3 or g/cm3)
Initial State
Incompressible fluid
Initial State
Compressible fluid
Sea-level
Denver, CO
Pressure:
30
Higher elevation
Height Less air above
(km) Lower pressure
Can be thought of as 20
weight of air above you.
(Note that pressure acts in
all directions!) 10
So as elevation increases,
pressure decreases.
0
Lower elevation
More air above
Higher pressure
Density and Pressure Variation
Key Points:
1. Both decrease
rapidly with height
2. Air is compressible,
i.e. its density varies
100 mb 16 km 48 km - 1 mb 32
km - 10 mb 16 km -
100 mb 0
km - 1000 mb
Equation for Pressure Variation
“Standard atmosphere”
is calculated based on
profiles at 30 latitude.
Contains 80% of
Layer of most interest
the atmospheric
to this course!!!
mass
Tropopause
Depth ranges from ~8 km
at the poles to ~16 km in
the tropics
Troposphere
Stratosphere
Ozone layer
Temperature once
again decreases
with height
Thermosphere
Temperature once
again increases
with height
Ionosphere
- extends from the upper mesosphere into the thermosphere.
Contains large numbers of charged particles called ions. Ions
are atoms or molecules that have gained an electron or lost an
electron so that they carry a charge. This occurs in the upper
atmosphere because the molecules are being constantly
bombarded by solar radiation.
Thermosphere
Mesosphere
Temperature
Inversion
Stratosphere Stable layer
Troposphere
T-profile
tropopause
Temperature
inversion