this post was submitted on 06 Apr 2024
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No Stupid Questions

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[–] Boozilla@lemmy.world 158 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) (3 children)

Think of the atmosphere as a layer cake. The bottom of the cake is very dense and the higher up you go, these layers get less and less dense. Up on a mountain, the air is very thin.

In other words, there are fewer air molecules per cubic foot (volume of air). The molecules are farther apart and can hold less heat energy. Because "heat" is what we say when we mean molecules are moving around. The more they move, and the more molecules there are, the more heat you have.

It's also helpful to know that the air is heated by the ground and oceans. The heat from our sun mostly passes right through the atmosphere, not directly warming the air up very much. But the surface of the planet will warm up wherever the sun is shining on it. And in turn, the warm ground or the warm surface water then gradually warms the air from the bottom up. (This is because heat is transferred in different modes: radiant, convection, and conduction.)

And the warm air does indeed rise. As it rises, it gradually spreads out and cools off again. Some of the heat even radiates back out into space.

There are "fountains" of air constantly circulating throughout the atmosphere, and this creates weather patterns. It tends to snow on mountains because the warm air has carried some moisture with it on its way up. As it cools and thins, it can't carry the moisture any more, and the moisture precipitates out. Which is why we call it precipitation whenever it snows, rains, sleets, etc.

So by the time air reaches a high mountaintop, it's probably going to be cool or even frigid cold.

This is also why hotter regions, like the southern US, tend to get very humid in the summer. The warm air can carry a lot of moisture, and there is a lot of warm surface water. Our sweat is less efficient when the air is moist, because it takes longer to evaporate and carry the heat away with it.

Deserts have few water sources. So they also have hot dry air, and much less humidity, and therefore little to no precipitation. But they also get cold at night, because there's very little humidity to hold the heat overnight.

All of this is to illustrate the complex interactions between the sun, the atmosphere, and water (or lack of it) on the surface, and humidity in the air.

Inside an older building you're more likely to experience warmer air on higher floors than lower floors because the air is trapped in a nearly closed system and hot air rises. Of course, HVAC engineers try to compensate for this in modern buildings.

[–] Twitches@lemm.ee 15 points 7 months ago

This is great thank you! Very interesting

[–] lurker2718@lemmings.world 8 points 7 months ago (1 children)

While I agree in general, one point is a bit to simplified in my opinion

In other words, there are fewer air molecules per cubic foot (volume of air). The molecules are farther apart and can hold less heat energy. Because "heat" is what we say when we mean molecules are moving around.

Less molecules mean less heat, it has nothing to do with the temperature, if you just decrease the density by removing half the molecules, you have the same temperature.

It cools down because it expands adiabatically. Consider a very thin balloon filled with air which is warmer than the surrounding. This now rises up, but as it does, the pressure decreases, causing the balloon to expand. During this expansion, the balloon transfers energy away from itself, because it has to push away air, to make room for expanding in the surrounding. This work cools the air inside the balloon. Assuming the air inside is dry, it would cool around 10 °C per km it rises. Now if you think about it, the balloon just stopped the inside from mixing with the outside. If you look at a large "piece" of air, it does not mix very fast, so you can remove the balloon and just consider what happens with warm air heated from the ground.

Now this does not mean, it has to be cooler when higher up. The same points hold, inside a house, but there it is often warmer when higher.

The best explaination is when looking where the heat comes from and goes too from the air. The atmosphere is mostly heated from the surface of earth, so the bottom and cooled from the upper layers. So naturally it gets hotter where it is heated. The question is now by how much? There are three modes of heat transfer in the atmosphere: radiation, conduction and convection. The first two are very slow. Connection is fast but has limits. Consider the piece of air, if it rises, it cools. So at some place it may be the same temperature as the surrounding air, so it stops rising. This means the convection works only when the air gets cooler by 10 °C/km going up (~6.5°C when the air is moist and precipation happens). So this temperature gradient is observable very often.

[–] Turun@feddit.de 2 points 7 months ago (2 children)

But does the energy to expand the balloon not just come from the pressure? Pressure has units of energy per volume btw.

[–] lurker2718@lemmings.world 2 points 7 months ago (1 children)

I think it is actually the other way around. You can consider the air inside the balloon to have internal energy from the heat. And additionally you have to make room for the balloon in the atmosphere, so you have removed the atmosphere from the volume the balloon takes, which also needs energy. If you consider both you arrive at the concept of enthalpy (H = U + pV), which is very useful for reactions in the atmosphere as pressure is constant. For this example it is not that useful as outside pressure changes when the balloon rises.

Another way to see it, the pressure has no "real" energy. In a ideal gas, the only energy comes from the kinetic or movement energy of the atoms. Each time a gas molecule is hits the balloon envelope it transfers some momentum. The cumulative effect of the constant collisions is the pressure of the gas. If the balloon is now expanding slowly, each collisions also tranfers some energy, in sum building the work the system has to do to the atmosphere. Leading to a decrease in internal, so "real" energy in the balloon. This corresponds to a decrease in temperature.

[–] Turun@feddit.de 2 points 7 months ago

Each time a gas molecule is hits the balloon envelope it transfers some momentum.

I see! Thank you very much!

If we assume the balloon model and the sides expand then each collision of a molecule inside the balloon with the outer wall will leave it with less speed and therefore lower energy and therefore a lower temperature.

As a consequence, gas expanding in a vacuum does not cool off, because it has nothing to transfer the energy to!

[–] Zippy@lemmy.world 1 points 7 months ago (1 children)

Balloons are open. Most typically do not expand but the excess air just escapes out the bottom. Basically they will rise till the overall weight matches that if what they displace.

There are more efficient balloons that do expand and can attain same great heights. Far more than conventional aircraft even. But that expansion is mostly due to excess material in the construction and little from stretching. Thus the pressure difference is minimal while the volume increase significantly with altitude.

[–] Turun@feddit.de 1 points 7 months ago

I can't even criticize this comment, because you wouldn't understand why.

So thanks for the effort I guess? But we're not discussing real balloons.

[–] pixxelkick@lemmy.world 37 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) (2 children)

Others have covered the fact it's because of air pressure but haven't fully answered why that is the way it is.

It's simple really.

The force of gravity is also at play. As you go higher up, gravity gets weaker as you get farther from the earth's centre.

And it is that gravitational force that increases the air's density, same reason why if you keep going down in the water, the water gets denser.

For the heat to move around you need to be in a sort of goldilocks zone of density.

It needs to be dense enough that the fluid molecules can move around and spread the convection energy around... but not so dense they can't move much either.

Furthermore there's actually a couple different layers of our atmosphere.

First at our level is the troposphere, where heat is absorbed into the ground itself and radiated back out, as well as the perpetual heat from the earth's core, and reflected off the ground too (visible light).

The troposphere is warm and gets colder as you get farther away from the earth's surface, naturally. That heat is absorbed by the air itself so, as you get farther away it gets colder as it has more air to travel through.

Up higher is the Stratosphere, where it's ice cold and the air thins out.

However we get a sudden uptick in temp as we go even higher into what is called the Stratopause, back to briefly warm temperatures between the Stratosphere and the Mesosohere. Why? How?

Simple, this is the little sweet spot Ozone molecules hang out, forming a protective convenient bubble around the earth. Ozone absorbs Ultraviolet light from the sun and turns out that stuff is HOT, so there's a band of a hot zone right above and below the Ozone layer. Think of it as a toasty little bubble around us.

Above is the mesosphere which cools off again and gets back to being really frosty quickly, for the same reason the Stratosphere did, distance.

Then we hit the mesosphere, which is effectively the point when the atmosphere is so thin it stops protecting and is the "outside" of our protective blanket.

You can imagine this like earth being wrapped in a blanket, and the mesosphere is everything outside the blanket. Without any protection you are subject to the unbridled radiation of the sun which means you go back to being really toasty, as you get a bit higher you are effectively in space now and will soon enough hit temps that just cook you alive in a minute or two. Really bad sunburn zone.

So to answer the question overall:

Hot air rises... but only when there is air to rise.

Top of the mountains just don't have enough air anymore for it to really rise much more. It still does but the hot air rising effect just gets weaker and weaker as the air gets thinner due to less gravity.

[–] rbesfe@lemmy.ca 37 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) (1 children)

The strength of the gravity field at the ISS orbit (400km) is still 90% of what it is at sea level. The air thins out at high altitudes because there's less air above it pushing down, not because of weaker gravity.

[–] GamingChairModel@lemmy.world 7 points 7 months ago

To add to this, the force of gravity at the top of Mt Everest is about 99.7% as strong as sea level. So you're right that it's not about the strength of gravity itself at that particular point, but about the weight of all the air above that point.

[–] ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world 1 points 7 months ago (2 children)

I never heard it explained that way. What an excellent comment. Thank you for taking the time.

[–] mipadaitu@lemmy.world 15 points 7 months ago

It's mostly true, but the basic premise is not. Gravity is not significantly lower in the upper atmosphere.

[–] Kolanaki@yiffit.net 14 points 7 months ago (1 children)

Calvin's Dad: "Because the hot air rose all the way to space and isn't on the mountain anymore."

[–] milicent_bystandr@lemm.ee 3 points 7 months ago (1 children)

That must be why it's still warm in aeroplanes that fly higher than Everest.

[–] sirico@feddit.uk 2 points 7 months ago (1 children)

Also why cold air balloons never took off

[–] milicent_bystandr@lemm.ee 2 points 7 months ago

Oh, they did take off.... They just went "ppthhlppppsssssssspplpssseeeeeeeethstsplpssseeeeeeeesssssssss" and fell to the ground again.

[–] milicent_bystandr@lemm.ee 11 points 7 months ago

I saw a great one-liner, and two megalogs, but no Goldilocks-sized answer, so here's my attempt.

As air rises, the weight of air above it (all the way to space) is less, so it's less squashed, letting it expand.

It expands by pushing out on all the air around it, and every time an air molecule bumps a neighbouring bit of air away, but isn't bumped back so hard (so it expands), it loses a bit of energy - i.e. heat.

So as some air goes up, it expands and loses heat; or as it sinks, it squashes and gets more heat.

This is adiabatic expansion.


Appendix:

This might beg the question of why higher air isn't just heated by neighbouring expanding air, making up for its original loss. I think that can be answered by saying overall the top air is squashing the bottom air, so overall the top is cooler. Is that fully right? Right now I feel there's multiple ways to think about it and I can't write any clearly without long rambling!

[–] moonpiedumplings@programming.dev 9 points 7 months ago
[–] RegalPotoo@lemmy.world 3 points 7 months ago (1 children)

Fun fact: the temperature of space is actually thousands of degrees, but you would still freeze to death without protection.

(The actual answer is that atmospheric pressure is just as important as temperature in determining how "cold" something is)

[–] Successful_Try543@feddit.de 3 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) (1 children)

The temperature of space actually is close to absolute zero, so quite cold. As the heat balance of an object there is mainly dominated by radiation, the object looses heat (~T⁴) but almost has no heat input from the surrounding if not directed to a star in sufficient proximity, e.g. the sun. The surface exposed to sunlight however, can become really hot.

[–] mipadaitu@lemmy.world 5 points 7 months ago (1 children)

It really depends on what you mean by temperature. You're both right, but both wrong depending on context.

Individual atoms and particles tend to have a lot of energy, but also there's almost no heat transfer into larger bodies because of the low density of those particles, so you lose more heat to radiation than you take in (unless you are in direct sunlight.)

[–] lurker2718@lemmings.world 1 points 7 months ago

Yes. One place in space has different temperatures. I would assume even individual particles are not distributed by a Maxwell distribution, so the concept of temperature is hard to apply. The background radiation has one temperature. If you add the sun, however, you already have a problem as the sun radiation is not in thermal equilibrium. So depending on how you look at it, you get different temperatures. The particles have a high energy, so also a high temperature. But they are so rare, that radiation is the dominant mode of heat transfer and determines the temperature of a thermometer placed in space.

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