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1.1: Introduction

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    We often take Earth’s atmosphere for granted. When we enjoy a sunset, go to the beach, or hike a trail, we don’t necessarily think of the vast volume of air around us that allows us to do these things. The atmosphere brings us the oxygen that fills our lungs; it brings us the beautiful blues of the sky above and the verdant greenery below. It is responsible for the existence of our oceans, lakes, and rivers, and without it we would not have beaches to enjoy. The fluffy, white cumulus clouds you see on a summer day are a result of both large- and small-scale motions in the atmosphere. The same is true of the hazy stratus, wispy cirrus, or towering cumulonimbus. The atmosphere is like a massive blanket that surrounds, sustains, protects, and warms us. Without it, no life would exist on Earth. In fact, the atmosphere is the very reason almost anything exists on Earth at all; our planet would be a dull, waterless, lifeless rock without it. Night-time without an atmosphere would be unimaginably cold, and daytime temperatures would soar above water’s boiling point. Nothing would separate Earth and the blistering sunlight but the empty vacuum of space.

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    View from outer space of the sun rising over Earth, illuminating the atmosphere in a ring of blue. NASA (Public Domain).

    Although the atmosphere was previously described as “vast”, in actuality it is relatively thin. If the Earth were shrunk down to the size of a basketball, the atmosphere would be roughly the thickness of a plastic sheet stretched across the ball. In the image above, the atmosphere can be seen as the thin veil of bluish white mist above our planet’s surface. Although we can travel thousands of kilometers horizontally along Earth’s surface, traveling vertically would be difficult — the air is too thin to breathe only a few kilometers above Earth’s surface.

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    View of the moon from space over Earth’s blue atmosphere (Public Domain).

    The goal of this chapter is to orient those who are new to atmospheric science with the basics as described previously in the Chapter 1 Learning Objectives.


    1.1: Introduction is shared under a CC BY-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.