isoteric
Atmospheric pressure is another name for air pressure. This is because the atmosphere is pretty much the same as air.
It is the atmospheric pressure of the earth pulling all things down but gravity can be overcome with speed and velocity.
air pressure
A barometer measures the pressure of the atmosphere. A manometer measures the pressure of something (most often a gas) inside a container. Some simple manometers actually measure the difference between the pressure inside the container and atmospheric pressure outside.
Malleable is a word that can be used to describe being reshaped by pressure.
Atmospheric pressure
Atmospheric Pressure or Air Pressure.
Atmospheric pressure is another name for air pressure. This is because the atmosphere is pretty much the same as air.
Different levels of atmospheric air pressure affect our weather every day.
The word is spelled barometer. It is an instrument that measures air pressure (atmospheric).
Isobar, which means a line on a map connecting points having the same atmospheric pressure at a given time or an average over a given period.
Iy forewarns because the lower the pressure the taller a cloud can be. So cumulonibuses need low pressure to produce tornadoes and that is why falling pressure can indicate a tornado. I stress the word can.
It is the atmospheric pressure of the earth pulling all things down but gravity can be overcome with speed and velocity.
congruent
Isobaric is the term meaning equal pressure. I don't recall seeing this word used in a medical context, though.
There is no word beginning with b that refers to lines on a map running through places experiencing equal pressure. Those lines are called isobars, meaning lines of equal pressure. (iso means the same and bar is a unit of measure of pressure.)
Because the gas giants don't have a solid surface, so it's hard to define a proper "surface" where the "atmosphere" ends and the real "planet" begins. Instead the "surface" of a gas giant is generally defined as the point where the pressure of the gas is equal to the atmospheric pressure at Earth's surface.