The amount of water vapor per cubic meter in the atmosphere as sea level is 30g/m3.
you need it for your chemistry lab, I guess :)
The lowest level of the Earth's atmosphere is called the troposphere. It is where most weather phenomena occur and contains approximately 75% of the atmosphere's mass.
Raising the water level on Earth by one foot would require approximately 356,000 cubic kilometers of water.
Atmospheric pressure is measured by a barometer and expressed in millibars. Normal atmospheric pressure at sea level is 1013 millibars.
Yes, sea-level pressure is determined by the weight of the air above a specific location due to gravity. The greater the amount of air molecules in the atmosphere, the higher the pressure. Changes in gravity will affect pressure readings, such as at higher elevations where there is less gravitational pull compared to sea level.
you need it for your chemistry lab, I guess :)
The weight of air at sea level is approximately 0.075 pounds per cubic foot. One cubic yard is equal to 27 cubic feet, so the weight of air per cubic yard at sea level would be approximately 2.025 pounds.
It will hold more water if it is warmer.
The lowest level of the Earth's atmosphere is called the troposphere. It is where most weather phenomena occur and contains approximately 75% of the atmosphere's mass.
1 atmosphere is equivalent to approximately 10 meters above sea level.
At sea level approximately 1Kg
CO2 provides approximately .03% of the earth's atmosphere. If you consider that the earth's atmosphere contains approximately 4.2 billion cubic kilometers - which is the "effective mass" of the atmosphere, or the mass of the entire atmosphere if measured at sea level pressure - then: 4.2 billion x .03 % = 1,260,000 cubic kilometers of CO2. The other constant used in this equation is the "Karman Limit" of 100 miles as the upper boundary for earth's atmosphere.
The density of the Earth's atmosphere varies with altitude, but at sea level it is approximately 1.2 kg/m^3. As you move higher in the atmosphere, the density decreases.
The volume of nitrogen in Earth's atmosphere is approximately 78% of the total volume at sea level, which is roughly 78.08%. The volume of nitrogen is expressed as a percentage of the total volume of gases in the atmosphere.
One cubic foot of air at sea level weighs approximately 0.08 pounds. Therefore, in one CFM (cubic foot per minute) of air, there would be approximately 0.08 pounds of air.
This is an old measurement, but 760 mm is one atmosphere.
The minimum amount of oxygen needed to sustain a fire in the atmosphere is about 16% oxygen. Below this level, the fire would not have enough oxygen to continue burning.