The higher you go up the lower the pressure but less air
Like on earth, atmosphere pressure is higher where elevation is lowest. The depth of Valleys and Impact craters, with depth of up 8000 meters, have the thickest atmosphere.
Actally Saturn does not have an atmosphere at all. Its 7 rings each have there own atmosphere.
a common manometer is a u-tube with a liquid filled about half way in each leg, one end is open to the atmosphere and the other connected to the thing that your measuring the pressure of, as the pressure increases, the liquid in the leg attached to your pressure of interest is forced down, and the pressure in the other leg is pushed up, because you are comparing it to the atmosphere it is a gauge pressure in comparison to the atmosphere =] hope this helps.
The troposphere is the layer of the earth's atmosphere with the highest air pressure.
Like a pressure, but with non-ideality Use as a pressure Fugacity = mole fraction of gas * total pressure Mole fraction of CO2 in atmosphere? 383 ppmv
the deeper it goes, the higher the preassure is
Like on earth, atmosphere pressure is higher where elevation is lowest. The depth of Valleys and Impact craters, with depth of up 8000 meters, have the thickest atmosphere.
Actally Saturn does not have an atmosphere at all. Its 7 rings each have there own atmosphere.
No. Air pressure decreases as you move up in the atmosphere. This is because air has mass and weight like everything else, and as you rise up in the atmosphere there is less air above you.
a common manometer is a u-tube with a liquid filled about half way in each leg, one end is open to the atmosphere and the other connected to the thing that your measuring the pressure of, as the pressure increases, the liquid in the leg attached to your pressure of interest is forced down, and the pressure in the other leg is pushed up, because you are comparing it to the atmosphere it is a gauge pressure in comparison to the atmosphere =] hope this helps.
A Barometer measures atmospheric pressure.
Shakespeare creates a unique atmosphere for each one of his plays.
Each liquid has a different boiling point; 101,3 kPa is he standard atmosphere pressure (atm).
Easy, there will differences in temperature and pressure in each atmosphere. Trosphere stratosphere mesosphere and thermosphere (note Trosphere is spelled wrong)
Easy, there will differences in temperature and pressure in each atmosphere. Trosphere stratosphere mesosphere and thermosphere (note Trosphere is spelled wrong)
Air molecules are piled up on each other in our atmosphere. The lower the air molecules, the more weight they're under causing more pressure. Higher up the molecules have more space to move around in resulting in lower pressure.
Pluto has a very thin atmosphere made mostly of nitrogen. Pressure varies as a substantial portion of it periodically freezes.