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The composition of Earth’s Atmosphere and the role of the atmosphere in Earth’s weather and climate Mrs. Radef Science 7 Spring 2015 (Adapted from CCSD RPDP Content Benchmark E.8.A.4 http://www.rpdp.net/sciencetips_v3/E8A4.htm ) http://www.rpdp.net/sciencetips_v3/E8A4.htm
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* The Atmosphere * Solar Energy * Earth’s Magnetic Fields
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* Absorbs the energy from the Sun * Recycles water and other chemicals to provide a moderate climate * Protects us from high-energy radiation and the frigid vacuum of space
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* Earth’s atmosphere is a very thin layer of gases that surround a very large planet. * An analogy of the relative diameter of the Earth compared to the thickness of the atmosphere would be to exhale onto a billiard ball (from a pool table). * The billiard ball represents the Earth and the thin layer of condensation represents the relative thickness of its atmosphere.
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* The atmosphere makes up less than one millionth of the total mass of the Earth. * Two gases make up the bulk of the atmosphere: * nitrogen (N 2 ) at 78% * oxygen (O 2 ) at 21%, * The other one percent includes water vapor, carbon dioxide (CO 2 ), argon, and trace amounts of other gases. Constant components (proportions remain the same over time and location) Nitrogen (N 2 )78.08% Oxygen (O 2 )20.95% Argon (Ar)0.93% Neon, Helium, Krypton0.00%
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* The atoms and molecules that make up the various layers in the atmosphere are constantly moving in random directions. * When they strike a surface they exert a force on that surface in what we observe as pressure.
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* Atmospheric pressure can be imagined as the weight of the overlying column of air. * Pressure decreases exponentially with increased altitude.
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* At the top of Mt. Everest (elevation 29,028 ft.), pressure is as low as 300 mb. * There are approximately one-third as many gas molecules inhaled per breath on top of Mt. Everest as at sea level * Climbers experience severe shortness of breath the higher they go, as less oxygen is inhaled with every breath.
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Earth’s atmosphere is divided into four layers: * Troposphere * Stratosphere * Mesosphere * Thermosphere * Thermosphere
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* Variable components have a much greater influence on both short-term weather and long-term climate. * Variations in water vapor impact relative humidity. * CO 2, CH 4, N 2 O, and SO 2 absorb heat emitted by the Earth and thus warm the atmosphere, creating the greenhouse effect.
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Variable components (amounts vary over time and location) Carbon dioxide (CO 2 )0.04% Water vapor (H 2 0)0-4% Methane (CH 4 )trace Sulfur dioxide (SO 2 )trace Ozone (O 3 )trace Nitrogen oxides (NO, NO 2 )trace
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Where can you go to learn more about the Earth’s Atmosphere? * http://www.noaa.gov/ http://www.noaa.gov/ * http://www.nasa.gov/ http://www.nasa.gov/ * http://earthguide.ucsd. edu/earthguide/diagra ms/atmosphere/index.h tml http://earthguide.ucsd. edu/earthguide/diagra ms/atmosphere/index.h tml http://earthguide.ucsd. edu/earthguide/diagra ms/atmosphere/index.h tml * http://www.ucar.edu/l earn/1_3_1.htm http://www.ucar.edu/l earn/1_3_1.htm http://www.ucar.edu/l earn/1_3_1.htm
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