in the troposphere, it goes down.( the layer closest to the surface) however, that changes as you go up in the atmosphere depending on what layer the air is in
The air pressure is rising.
the air pressure increases
On a windy day atmospheric pressure decreases because the higher the wind velocity, the lower the air pressure, or atmospheric pressure. This is how chimneys work, the air that moves above the chimney causes low air pressure because of the high wind velocity compared the velocity of the air inside a house. The air inside the house goes towards the low air pressure and takes the smoke with it.
pressure decreses
False... lower temperatures have more dense air pressure than warm areas. Winds alway blow towards low pressure areas in an attempt to equalise the air pressure (basic physics).
actually it does. The lower the temp. the lower the air pressure so high temp cause high pressure.
Warm temp create area of low atmospheric pressure on the Earth's surface while area of high pressure r generated when temp r relatively cold. Once established, the thermal gradient then develops a flow of air that goes from high 2 low pressure
It decreases, and air goes into the lung passages. You inhale.
air pressure becomes less in cold tempuratures
When the altitude increases, the air pressure decreases (or "GOES DOWN") and vice versa. This is due to the fact that air is affected by gravity, therefore there is more of it at a lower altitude than at a higher altitude.
bob is the best
Temperature differences is why air moves in the atmosphere. Hot air rises, cold air falls. With these temperature difference comes pressure differences and these temp. and pressure differences are what keep the air moving. Theoretically, if there were no temp. or pressure differences in the atmosphere, air would not move.
It drops.
It changes based on vehicle, outside temp, and desired inside temp. Pressuse depends on ambient temperature, the higher the temp, the greater the pressure
The air pressure is rising.
i think you subtract the evaporator temp from the outside temp?
temp of inbound air across a coil