Air is not just
empty space—it has substance, or mass. Air has molecules that are constantly
moving. Because air has mass, Earth’s gravity attracts it and gives it weight.
Because it has weight, and the air molecules are constantly bumping into
things, it exerts pressure.
The Earth's
atmosphere is an extremely thin layer of air. There is no exact place where the
atmosphere ends; it just keeps getting thinner until it merges with space. The
most commonly accepted boundary between Earth’s atmosphere and space is at
about 100 kilometers (62 miles) above the
Earth’s surface. This boundary is called the “Kármán Line.” In this
picture, taken from a spacecraft orbiting at 320 kilometers (200
miles), the atmosphere appears as a thin blue band between the Earth’s surface
and the blackness of space. If the Earth were the size of a basketball, the
thickness of the atmosphere could be modeled by
a thin sheet of plastic wrapped around the ball.
Credit: NASA
Earth’s
atmosphere is pressing against each square inch of you with a force equal to
about 1 kilogram per square centimeter (14.7
pounds per square inch). The force on 1,000 square centimeters (a
little larger than a square foot) is about a ton!
As you go up,
air pressure goes down, because the higher you go, the less air there is
pressing down on you from above.
If you were to
stand at sea level, at an altitude of 0 meters (0 feet), the air pressure would
be 1 kilogram per square centimeter (14.7
pounds per square inch). If you were to move to Denver, Colorado, at an
altitude of about 1,610 meters (5,280 feet), the air pressure would be 0.85
kilograms per square centimeter (12 pounds
per square inch). And if you were to go to the top of Mt. Everest, at an
altitude of about 8,848 meters (29,028 feet), the air pressure would only be
0.3 kilograms per square centimeter (4.5
pounds per square inch).
The pressure of
the air in your lungs and in other spaces inside your body balances the pressure
of the air around you.
If the average
adult has about 2 square meters (21 square feet) of surface area, that adds up
to about 20,000 kilograms (44,100 pounds) of pressure!