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1.4: Hydrostatic Balance

  • Page ID
    46137
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    We’ve learned that atmospheric pressure decreases with height. We’ve also learned that air moves from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure due to the pressure gradient force. Knowing these two things, you might think that the air in the atmosphere would escape into space, because there is high pressure at the surface and low pressure aloft. Because it does not, there must be a downward force that balances the upward vertical pressure gradient force. This downward force is a force that should be very familiar to you: gravity.

    In the atmosphere, when the vertical pressure gradient force is balanced by gravity, this is known as hydrostatic balance. The word hydro means water or fluid, and static means stationary, so the name can be interpreted as a stationary fluid balance. This balance holds true for most situations in the atmosphere. The hydrostatic equation is given by

    \[\frac{\Delta P}{\Delta z}=-\rho *|g| \nonumber \]

    where \(g\) = -9.8 m·s-2 is the acceleration due to gravity.

    The negative sign here is due to the fact that pressure is decreasing as height increases so the left-hand side will be negative.

    If you plan to use the above equation to calculate changes in altitude (\(\Delta z\)) with changes in pressure (\(\Delta P\)) or vise versa, note that the above equation applies best over small changes. If the change in pressure or altitude is large, the exponential equation for \(P(z)\) defined above is best.


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