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Image:Atmosphere model.png Temperature and pressure against altitude from the NRLMSISE-00 standard atmosphere model
Pressure and temperature structurePressureThe pressure of the atmosphere is highest at the surface and decreases with height. This is because air at the surface is compressed by the weight of all the air above it. At higher altitudes, the weight of the air above is less so the air is compressed less and has a lower pressure. This change in pressure with height can be predicted with the hydrostatic equation:
where:
TemperatureIn the troposphere, the temperature decreases with height at an average rate of 6.5 °C for every 1 km (1000 meters) increase in height. This decrease in temperature is caused by adiabatic cooling—as air rises the atmospheric pressure falls so the air expands. In order to expand, the air must do work on its surroundings and therefore its temperature decreases (due to Conservation of energy). Temperatures decrease at middle latitudes from approx. +17°C at sea level to approx. -52°C at the beginning of the tropopause. At the poles, the troposphere is thinner and the temperature only decreases to -45 °C, while at the equator the temperature at the top of the troposphere can reach -75 °C. TropopauseThe tropopause is the boundary region between the troposphere and the stratosphere. Measuring the temperature change with height through the troposphere and the stratosphere identifies the location of the tropopause. In the troposphere, temperature decreases with altitude. In the stratosphere, however, the temperature increases with altitude. The region of the atmosphere where the lapse rate changes from positive (in the troposphere) to negative (in the stratosphere), is defined as the tropopause. Image:AtmosphCirc2.png An idealised view of three large circulation cells. Atmospheric circulationThe basic structure of large-scale circulation in the atmosphere remains fairly constant. There are three convection cells in each hemisphere: the Hadley cell, the Ferrel cell, and the Polar cell which guide the prevailing winds and transport heat from the equator to the poles.
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