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Atmosphere
Submitted by – Suresh Shah
M.Sc. 4th sem.
Department of Physics
CONTENT
Earth atmosphere
Composition of atmosphere
Nitrogen cycle
Pressure in atmosphere
Pressure changes with altitude
Measure pressure
 Fact about Earth’s atmosphere
Atmospheric Chemistry
Troposphere
Stratosphere
Mesosphere
2
Thermosphere
Exosphere
Ionosphere
Acid Rain
Green House Effect
Ozone Depletion
Earth’s
atmosphere!
3
Earth’s atmosphere is a layer of gases surrounding the
planet.
The Earth is surrounded by a blanket
of air, which we call the atmosphere.
It reaches over 560 kilometers from
the surface of the Earth.
Atmosphere:
Absorbs the energy from the Sun,
Recycles water and other chemicals,
protects us from high-energy radiation and the frigid
vacuum of space.
The atmosphere protects and supports life.
Earth’s atmosphere
Earth’s atmosphere is made of a mixture of gases
called air.
Nitrogen gas makes up about 78% of
Earth’s atmosphere.
The second most abundant gas is
oxygen, which makes up 21% of
Earth’s atmosphere.
The third Argon (Ar, 0.9%).
Carbon Dioxide (CO2, 0.03%).
5
Composition of the Atmosphere
The atmosphere is comprised of a variety of gases:
Major Constituents (99%):
Nitrogen (N): 78%
Oxygen (O2): 21%
Trace Constituents:
Argon (Ar), about 0.9%
Water vapor (H2O), up to 10000 ppmv
Carbon dioxide (CO2), 350 ppmv
Ozone (O3), near zero at the surface, up to 10
ppmv in the stratosphere
Methane (CH4), 1.7 ppmv
and others…..
ppmv = “parts per million by volume”
Nitrogen Cycle
> Nitrogen is important to protein
which is found in the body tissues
of all living things.
> Nitrogen is cycled through the
soil and into plants and finally
when living things die and decay.
6
Pressure in the
atmosphere
> Atmospheric pressure is the force per unit
area exerted into a surface by the weight of
air above that surface in the atmosphere of
earth
> The gas molecules closest to Earth’s surface
are packed together very closely.
> This means pressure is lower the higher up
you go into the atmosphere.
7
> At sea level, the weight
of the column of air
above a person is about
9,800 Newtons (2,200
pounds)!
> This is equal to the
weight of a small car.
Pressure in the atmosphere
8
2,200pounds=
Pressure changes with altitude
Pressure varies
smoothly from
the Earth's
surface to the top
of themesosphere
9
Measuring Pressure
> A barometer is an instrument
that measures atmospheric
pressure.
> Long ago, mercury barometers
were used Since mercury is a
poisonous liquid, aneroid
barometers are used today.
10
EARTH’S ATMOSPHERE
11
o Troposphere
o Stratosphere
o Mesosphere
o Thermosphere and
o Exosphere.
The exosphere gradually fades away into the realm of
interplanetary space.
Earth’s atmosphere has a series of layers, each with its
own specific traits.
Moving upward from ground level, these layers are named
Atmospheric Chemistry
EARTH’S
ATMOSPHERE
12
Exosphere
o1600 km; Very high Temp.,
oH2, HE, Outer Space
Thermosphere
o90-500 km; -92 to 1200 oC
Temp.,
oO2, NO+
Mesosphere
o50-90 km; -2 to -92 oC Temp,
o(Ionoshere: O+
2, O+ , NO+ , e-)
Stratosphere
o11-50 km; -56 to -2 oC Temp,
oO3 (Ozone Layer: 15 km)
Troposphere
o0-11 km; 15 to -56 oC Temp,
oN2, O2, CO2, H2O
Troposphere
> Lowest and thinnest layer 16 km at equator, 8 km
at poles
> 90% of the atmosphere’s mass
> Temperature decreases with altitude
6°C per kilometer
Top of troposphere averages –50°C
> Where weather occurs
> Boundary between the troposphere, and the
stratosphere is called the tropopause.
13
View of troposphere layer from an
airplane's window.
Stratosphere
14
The stratosphere extends from the top of the
troposphere to about 50 km (31 miles) above the
ground.
The infamous ozone layer is found within the
stratosphere.
Ozone molecules in this layer absorb high-energy
ultraviolet (UV) light from the Sun, converting
the UV energy into heat.
Unlike the troposphere, the stratosphere actually
gets warmer the higher you go!
That trend of rising temperatures with altitude
means that air in the stratosphere lacks the
turbulence and updrafts of the troposphere beneath.
Commercial passenger jets fly in the lower
stratosphere, partly because this less-turbulent layer
provides a smoother ride.
The jet stream flows near the border between the
troposphere and the stratosphere.
Mesosphere
15
Above the stratosphere is the mesosphere.
It extends upward to a height of about
85 km (53 miles) above our planet.
Most meteors burn up in the mesosphere.
Unlike the stratosphere, temperatures
once again grow colder as you rise up
through the mesosphere.
The coldest temperatures in Earth's
atmosphere, about -90° C (-130° F), are
found near the top of this layer.
The air in the mesosphere is far too thin to
breathe; air pressure at the bottom of the
layer is well below 1% of the pressure at sea
level, and continues dropping as you go
higher.
Thermosphere
16
The layer of very rare air above the mesosphere is
called the thermosphere.
High-energy X-rays and UV radiation from the
Sun are absorbed in the thermosphere, raising its
temperature to hundreds or at times thousands of
degrees.
The air in this layer is so thin that it would feel
freezing cold to us!
The thermosphere is more like outer space than a
part of the atmosphere. Many satellites actually
orbit Earth within the thermosphere!
The top of the thermosphere can be found
anywhere between 500 and 1,000 km (311 to 621
miles) above the ground. Temperatures in the
upper thermosphere can range from about 500 °C
(932 °F) to 2,000 °C (3,632 °F) or higher.
The aurora, the Northern Lights and Southern
Lights, occur in the thermosphere.
Place your screenshot
here
17
Although some experts consider the thermosphere
to be the uppermost layer of our atmosphere,
other consider the exosphere to be the actual
"final frontier" of Earth's gaseous envelope.
As you might imagine, the "air" in the exosphere is
very, very, very thin, making this layer even more
space-like than the thermosphere.
In fact, air in the exosphere is constantly - though
very gradually - "leaking" out of Earth's
atmosphere into outer space.
There is no clear-cut upper boundary where the
exosphere finally fades away into space.
Different definitions place the top of the exosphere
somewhere between 100,000 km (62,000 miles)
and 190,000 km (120,000 miles) above the surface
of Earth.
The latter value is about halfway to the Moon!
Exosphere
18
The ionosphere is not a distinct layer like
the other mentioned above.
The ionosphere is a series of regions in
parts of the mesosphere and thermosphere
where high-energy radiation from the Sun
has knocked electrons loose from their
parent atoms and molecules.
The electrically charged atoms and
molecules that are formed in this way are
called ions, giving the ionosphere its name
and endowing this region with some
special properties.
Ionosphere
19
Atmospheric Chemistry
The composition and chemistry of the Earth's atmosphere
is of importance for several reasons.
But, primarily because of the interactions between
o Atmosphere and
o Living organisms.
The composition of the Earth's atmosphere changes as
result of natural processes such as:
o Volcano emissions
o Lightning and
o Bombardment by solar particles from corona.
It has also been changed by human
activity and some of
these changes are harmful to:
o Human health
o Crops and
o Ecosystems.
Examples of problems which have
been addressed by
atmospheric chemistry include:
o Acid rain
o Ozone depletion
o Photochemical smog
o Greenhouse gases and
o Global warming.
20
21
This phenomenon came to attention in the 1970s
Burning coal, oil and natural gas in power stations makes electricity,
giving off Sulphur dioxide gas.
Burning petrol and oil in vehicle engines gives off Nitrogen oxides as
gases.
Presence of H2SO4 (related to SO2 from coal combustion) and HNO3
(from NO2)
In the presence of lightning and thunderstorm, the nitrogen of the
atmosphere combines with oxygen to form nitric oxide (NO), which
in turn combines with oxygen to give nitrogen dioxide.
N2 + O2 ————→ 2 NO
2 NO + O2 ————→ 2 NO2
In the atmosphere, nitrogen dioxide reacts with water vapour
producing nitric acid, which is washed down as acid rain.
3 NO2 + H2O ————→ 2 HNO3 + NO
The formation of Nitric acid and Sulphuric acid as secondary
pollutants in the atmosphere leads to acid rain.
ACID RAIN
22
All rain is acidic with or without air pollution.
This is due to the natural presence of carbon dioxide in the
atmosphere with dissolves in rain drops of rain water (even
moisture present in the atmosphere does the same function) to
form Carbonic acid.
CO2 + H2O → H2CO3
Due to the above reaction carbon dioxide can dissolve in water
until the solution becomes saturated.
This results in the rain water attaining an acidic pH of 5.6
Due to this, the purest form of rain reaches the earth as an
acidic solution of pH 5.6
Acidity causes Environmental problems like
o Destruction of vegetation
o Marine life
o Corrosion and
o Etching of buildings that are exposed to atmosphere.
ACID RAIN
23
The trapping of heat by gases in the atmosphere.
Naturally occurring greenhouse gases:
Water vapor
Carbon dioxide
Methane
Nitrous oxide
Ozone
Greenhouse gases that are not naturally occurring
Hydro fluorocarbons (HFCs)
Per fluorocarbons (PFCs)
Sulfur hexafluoride (SF6)
Generated in a variety of
industrial processes.
Green house effect
24
Some of the infrared
radiation passes
through the
atmosphere. some is
observed and reemitted
in all directions
by greenhouse gas
molecules. This causes
the earth surface and
lower atmosphere to
warm
Infrared radiation is
realized from the
Earth
Some Solar
radiation
redirected by
both the Earth
& atmosphere
The majority of the
radiation is absorbed
by the Earth’s
Surface with it
warms
Infrared radiation is
realized from the
Earth SurfaceEARTH
25
Ozone depletion
How ozone is formed?
26
Man-made causes of depletion of ozone layer:
• The main cause for the depletion of ozone is determined as
excessive release of chlorine and bromine from man-made
compounds such as chloro fluoro carbons (CFCs).
• CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons)
• Halogens
• CH3CCl3 (Methyl chloroform)
• CCl4(Carbon tetrachloride)
• HCFCs (hydro-chlorofluorocarbons)
• Hydro bromo fluoro carbons and
Methyl bromide are found to have direct impact on the depletion of the ozone layer.
• These are categorized as Ozone-Depleting Substances (ODS).
• Chlorofluorocarbons are released into the atmosphere due to:
o Cleaning Agents
o Coolants in refrigerators
o Packing material
o Air conditioning
o Aerosol spray cans etc.
Ozone depletion
27
Why is the ozone layer important?
UV- Radiation DNA - damage
Skin Cancer
28
Thanks!

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Atmosphere (suresh lal shah)assignment

  • 1. Atmosphere Submitted by – Suresh Shah M.Sc. 4th sem. Department of Physics
  • 2. CONTENT Earth atmosphere Composition of atmosphere Nitrogen cycle Pressure in atmosphere Pressure changes with altitude Measure pressure  Fact about Earth’s atmosphere Atmospheric Chemistry Troposphere Stratosphere Mesosphere 2 Thermosphere Exosphere Ionosphere Acid Rain Green House Effect Ozone Depletion
  • 3. Earth’s atmosphere! 3 Earth’s atmosphere is a layer of gases surrounding the planet. The Earth is surrounded by a blanket of air, which we call the atmosphere. It reaches over 560 kilometers from the surface of the Earth. Atmosphere: Absorbs the energy from the Sun, Recycles water and other chemicals, protects us from high-energy radiation and the frigid vacuum of space. The atmosphere protects and supports life.
  • 4. Earth’s atmosphere Earth’s atmosphere is made of a mixture of gases called air. Nitrogen gas makes up about 78% of Earth’s atmosphere. The second most abundant gas is oxygen, which makes up 21% of Earth’s atmosphere. The third Argon (Ar, 0.9%). Carbon Dioxide (CO2, 0.03%).
  • 5. 5 Composition of the Atmosphere The atmosphere is comprised of a variety of gases: Major Constituents (99%): Nitrogen (N): 78% Oxygen (O2): 21% Trace Constituents: Argon (Ar), about 0.9% Water vapor (H2O), up to 10000 ppmv Carbon dioxide (CO2), 350 ppmv Ozone (O3), near zero at the surface, up to 10 ppmv in the stratosphere Methane (CH4), 1.7 ppmv and others….. ppmv = “parts per million by volume”
  • 6. Nitrogen Cycle > Nitrogen is important to protein which is found in the body tissues of all living things. > Nitrogen is cycled through the soil and into plants and finally when living things die and decay. 6
  • 7. Pressure in the atmosphere > Atmospheric pressure is the force per unit area exerted into a surface by the weight of air above that surface in the atmosphere of earth > The gas molecules closest to Earth’s surface are packed together very closely. > This means pressure is lower the higher up you go into the atmosphere. 7
  • 8. > At sea level, the weight of the column of air above a person is about 9,800 Newtons (2,200 pounds)! > This is equal to the weight of a small car. Pressure in the atmosphere 8 2,200pounds=
  • 9. Pressure changes with altitude Pressure varies smoothly from the Earth's surface to the top of themesosphere 9
  • 10. Measuring Pressure > A barometer is an instrument that measures atmospheric pressure. > Long ago, mercury barometers were used Since mercury is a poisonous liquid, aneroid barometers are used today. 10
  • 11. EARTH’S ATMOSPHERE 11 o Troposphere o Stratosphere o Mesosphere o Thermosphere and o Exosphere. The exosphere gradually fades away into the realm of interplanetary space. Earth’s atmosphere has a series of layers, each with its own specific traits. Moving upward from ground level, these layers are named
  • 12. Atmospheric Chemistry EARTH’S ATMOSPHERE 12 Exosphere o1600 km; Very high Temp., oH2, HE, Outer Space Thermosphere o90-500 km; -92 to 1200 oC Temp., oO2, NO+ Mesosphere o50-90 km; -2 to -92 oC Temp, o(Ionoshere: O+ 2, O+ , NO+ , e-) Stratosphere o11-50 km; -56 to -2 oC Temp, oO3 (Ozone Layer: 15 km) Troposphere o0-11 km; 15 to -56 oC Temp, oN2, O2, CO2, H2O
  • 13. Troposphere > Lowest and thinnest layer 16 km at equator, 8 km at poles > 90% of the atmosphere’s mass > Temperature decreases with altitude 6°C per kilometer Top of troposphere averages –50°C > Where weather occurs > Boundary between the troposphere, and the stratosphere is called the tropopause. 13 View of troposphere layer from an airplane's window.
  • 14. Stratosphere 14 The stratosphere extends from the top of the troposphere to about 50 km (31 miles) above the ground. The infamous ozone layer is found within the stratosphere. Ozone molecules in this layer absorb high-energy ultraviolet (UV) light from the Sun, converting the UV energy into heat. Unlike the troposphere, the stratosphere actually gets warmer the higher you go! That trend of rising temperatures with altitude means that air in the stratosphere lacks the turbulence and updrafts of the troposphere beneath. Commercial passenger jets fly in the lower stratosphere, partly because this less-turbulent layer provides a smoother ride. The jet stream flows near the border between the troposphere and the stratosphere.
  • 15. Mesosphere 15 Above the stratosphere is the mesosphere. It extends upward to a height of about 85 km (53 miles) above our planet. Most meteors burn up in the mesosphere. Unlike the stratosphere, temperatures once again grow colder as you rise up through the mesosphere. The coldest temperatures in Earth's atmosphere, about -90° C (-130° F), are found near the top of this layer. The air in the mesosphere is far too thin to breathe; air pressure at the bottom of the layer is well below 1% of the pressure at sea level, and continues dropping as you go higher.
  • 16. Thermosphere 16 The layer of very rare air above the mesosphere is called the thermosphere. High-energy X-rays and UV radiation from the Sun are absorbed in the thermosphere, raising its temperature to hundreds or at times thousands of degrees. The air in this layer is so thin that it would feel freezing cold to us! The thermosphere is more like outer space than a part of the atmosphere. Many satellites actually orbit Earth within the thermosphere! The top of the thermosphere can be found anywhere between 500 and 1,000 km (311 to 621 miles) above the ground. Temperatures in the upper thermosphere can range from about 500 °C (932 °F) to 2,000 °C (3,632 °F) or higher. The aurora, the Northern Lights and Southern Lights, occur in the thermosphere.
  • 17. Place your screenshot here 17 Although some experts consider the thermosphere to be the uppermost layer of our atmosphere, other consider the exosphere to be the actual "final frontier" of Earth's gaseous envelope. As you might imagine, the "air" in the exosphere is very, very, very thin, making this layer even more space-like than the thermosphere. In fact, air in the exosphere is constantly - though very gradually - "leaking" out of Earth's atmosphere into outer space. There is no clear-cut upper boundary where the exosphere finally fades away into space. Different definitions place the top of the exosphere somewhere between 100,000 km (62,000 miles) and 190,000 km (120,000 miles) above the surface of Earth. The latter value is about halfway to the Moon! Exosphere
  • 18. 18 The ionosphere is not a distinct layer like the other mentioned above. The ionosphere is a series of regions in parts of the mesosphere and thermosphere where high-energy radiation from the Sun has knocked electrons loose from their parent atoms and molecules. The electrically charged atoms and molecules that are formed in this way are called ions, giving the ionosphere its name and endowing this region with some special properties. Ionosphere
  • 19. 19 Atmospheric Chemistry The composition and chemistry of the Earth's atmosphere is of importance for several reasons. But, primarily because of the interactions between o Atmosphere and o Living organisms. The composition of the Earth's atmosphere changes as result of natural processes such as: o Volcano emissions o Lightning and o Bombardment by solar particles from corona.
  • 20. It has also been changed by human activity and some of these changes are harmful to: o Human health o Crops and o Ecosystems. Examples of problems which have been addressed by atmospheric chemistry include: o Acid rain o Ozone depletion o Photochemical smog o Greenhouse gases and o Global warming. 20
  • 21. 21 This phenomenon came to attention in the 1970s Burning coal, oil and natural gas in power stations makes electricity, giving off Sulphur dioxide gas. Burning petrol and oil in vehicle engines gives off Nitrogen oxides as gases. Presence of H2SO4 (related to SO2 from coal combustion) and HNO3 (from NO2) In the presence of lightning and thunderstorm, the nitrogen of the atmosphere combines with oxygen to form nitric oxide (NO), which in turn combines with oxygen to give nitrogen dioxide. N2 + O2 ————→ 2 NO 2 NO + O2 ————→ 2 NO2 In the atmosphere, nitrogen dioxide reacts with water vapour producing nitric acid, which is washed down as acid rain. 3 NO2 + H2O ————→ 2 HNO3 + NO The formation of Nitric acid and Sulphuric acid as secondary pollutants in the atmosphere leads to acid rain. ACID RAIN
  • 22. 22 All rain is acidic with or without air pollution. This is due to the natural presence of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere with dissolves in rain drops of rain water (even moisture present in the atmosphere does the same function) to form Carbonic acid. CO2 + H2O → H2CO3 Due to the above reaction carbon dioxide can dissolve in water until the solution becomes saturated. This results in the rain water attaining an acidic pH of 5.6 Due to this, the purest form of rain reaches the earth as an acidic solution of pH 5.6 Acidity causes Environmental problems like o Destruction of vegetation o Marine life o Corrosion and o Etching of buildings that are exposed to atmosphere. ACID RAIN
  • 23. 23 The trapping of heat by gases in the atmosphere. Naturally occurring greenhouse gases: Water vapor Carbon dioxide Methane Nitrous oxide Ozone Greenhouse gases that are not naturally occurring Hydro fluorocarbons (HFCs) Per fluorocarbons (PFCs) Sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) Generated in a variety of industrial processes. Green house effect
  • 24. 24 Some of the infrared radiation passes through the atmosphere. some is observed and reemitted in all directions by greenhouse gas molecules. This causes the earth surface and lower atmosphere to warm Infrared radiation is realized from the Earth Some Solar radiation redirected by both the Earth & atmosphere The majority of the radiation is absorbed by the Earth’s Surface with it warms Infrared radiation is realized from the Earth SurfaceEARTH
  • 26. 26 Man-made causes of depletion of ozone layer: • The main cause for the depletion of ozone is determined as excessive release of chlorine and bromine from man-made compounds such as chloro fluoro carbons (CFCs). • CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons) • Halogens • CH3CCl3 (Methyl chloroform) • CCl4(Carbon tetrachloride) • HCFCs (hydro-chlorofluorocarbons) • Hydro bromo fluoro carbons and Methyl bromide are found to have direct impact on the depletion of the ozone layer. • These are categorized as Ozone-Depleting Substances (ODS). • Chlorofluorocarbons are released into the atmosphere due to: o Cleaning Agents o Coolants in refrigerators o Packing material o Air conditioning o Aerosol spray cans etc. Ozone depletion
  • 27. 27 Why is the ozone layer important? UV- Radiation DNA - damage Skin Cancer