Talk:Earth's atmosphere
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"Atmosphere composition" It calls my attention that in this article oxigen is treated as O2. In my understanding it should be O. Ozone is composed of three molecules of oxigen O3. If oxigen were O2 then ozone would be O6. user:H_Cravero 8 November 2006
I just reworked a few sections. For some reason I was not logged in anymore when I submitted the changes; they were the two changes after the july 18 edit by cos111 (me).
I am not exactly an expert on global warming and climate change, but I think what I did with that is a lot better--better introduction and explanation, and a little more NPOV. user:cos111 2003-07-19
What on earth happened to this article?! Shatha 22:34, 10 March 2006 (UTC)
"Evolution of Earth's Atmosphere" asserts that a molten earth causes an unstable atmosphere. Why? Gas giants have non-solid surfaces and they have stable atmospheres.
There are still some problems here - some minor changes need to be made for clarity's sake, but some genuine factual errors need to be fixed. It was not heat that drove away hydrogen and helium, it was lack of gravity combined with solar wind. If those changes haven't been made when I check back, I'll make them. Otherwise, have at it. Denni 18:20, 2004 Jan 18 (UTC)
- ...well actually, in order for Helium and Hydrogen(molecules) to become bouyant in an atmosphere they require heat. But in combination with atmospheric conditions which would include things like gravity and external forces... --Hard Raspy Sci 18:36, 11 Feb 2005 (UTC)
Note that even within this region [Ozone layer], ozone is a minor constituent by volume.
Just as well, because otherwise you might die of ozone poisoning if you fell out of a supersonic airplane.
[edit] Units
This article has a mixture of British and US spellings. Not sure which way the article started, but spelling should be changed to one way or the other.
(It's amazing how bad an article looks with a mixture of the two, IMHO)
Duk 23:23, 11 Sep 2004 (UTC)
Looks like someone onece chnged all units from kilometers to miles. Another one reverted changes of the page, but not of the picture. Anyone knows, how to get an old picture back? Or may be it's better to create an image with all units on it? (and also note all the values inside an article with an appropriate notice? - like 10km (16mi)Mihail Vasiliev 18:50, 28 October 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Incorporate from Air
Air was turning into a weak mirror of this article, so I cut its head off and made it a disambig. This is the information that was removed, feel free to incorporate it as is seen fit.
Dry air is roughly 79% nitrogen, 20% oxygen, and 1% argon. Air may contain 0-7 % water vapor (the 79%, 20% and 1% become accordingly a little less), and less than 1% carbon dioxide. The composition of air changes with altitude; also exhaled air contains a greater percentage of carbon dioxide than what is inhaled, ca. 4.5%.
There is a more accurate chart athttp://education.jlab.org/glossary/abund_atmos.html. Pressure decreases with altitude; this is why aircraft have pressurised cabins. The air pressure inside aircraft cabins is maintained at a pressure higher than that outside, for the comfort of the passengers and crew, although for fuel efficiency reasons the pressure is still slightly lower than at ground level. With a decrease in total air pressure, the partial pressure of all the component gases (including oxygen) decreases. Mountain climbers must carry a supply of oxygen on their way up to the summit of high mountains to ensure the partial pressure of oxygen in their blood is maintained. |
--Ben Brockert 01:21, Oct 21, 2004 (UTC)
[edit] Composition table
The composition table is misleading and a bit redundant. The totals given indicate 9 significant figures - far more precision than is possible. The totals thus are misleading and should be eliminated. If we don't worry about the fictitious total then we don't need the Normalized to 100% column at all (doesn't total to 100% anyway) it is meaningless. I would recommend following the NASA site used as a source and give the minor compnents in ppm thereby eliminating all those meaningless zeros and any need for totalling. CO2 and methane are indeed quite variable both spatially and temporally and the values given are only an average. I plan to modify the table drastically unless someone can present good reasons to keep it as it is. Vsmith 04:51, 1 Jan 2005 (UTC)
- The "per NASA" part of the table has the same number of signifcant figures as the NASA page; the other column has two more sig figs for each number, otherwise the adjustment doesn't get it much closer to 100%. The adjusted figures were used to create the pie chart. Reporting the numbers in percent and PPM is inelegant. --—Ben Brockert (42) UE News 06:35, Jan 1, 2005 (UTC)
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- Removed un-needed normalized column (noted the normalization in the figure caption). The values in the figure are misleading in that they imply a greater precision than is justified by the data. Please review the meaning and rules for significant figures. The total is now to correct # of sig. figures, but as noted above is rather misleading due to variability noted and should probably be cut. As for ppm and elegancy - nonsense. Should be as ppmv. Perhaps the inelegancy of ppmv would negate the perceived need for a 100% total. I may return to rid this mis-leading elegance :-) -Vsmith 03:38, 6 Feb 2005 (UTC)
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- If you change some of the values from the reference, you need to adjust the others. As CO2 increases the fraction of O2 and N2 decrease in the last digit. This should at least be noted. Archimerged 14:42, 15 January 2006 (UTC)
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COMMENTS: BIOL 1409.2426 (Student Joseph Cahill): (State your opinion of the need or lack of need to be more environmentally friendly).
It is my opinion that we MUST become more environmentally friendly immediately! Simple steps can be taken everyday by anyone who make this a priority. Recycling is the easiest way to begin to help out. I personally make a point of recycling all plastic, cans and other materials like paper that I can everyday. I have three bins set-up in my house to store and collect the items. I use cloth bags when I shop and ensure every container I use can be recycled.
On the topic of the Global Warning, it is my opinion that society is slowly becoming aware of the need to reduce ozone gases. Baby-steps are being taken by the auto industry to create hybrid and fuel cell cars. The demand for the hybrid cars is mainly based on the increase cost of petroleum gas NOT because suddenly all drivers realize the impact of combustion engines. I wish that the huge sales of the successful Toyota Prius Hybrid were ALL because of environmental concerns, however it is more about the cost of operation. Damage to the Earth's atmosphere has an impact on ALL living things. This is scary because if one link in a food chain is disturbed it affects the entire chain.
- I agree with you. And I have updated the concentration of CO2 to 380 from 350 as it has changed - The reference may no longer be valid.--Max Randor 12:46, 5 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Page name
Shouldn't this be at Atmosphere of Earth? - Fredrik | talk 16:42, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
- That now re-directs here. Vsmith 16:51, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Heterosphere
There's a layer in the atmosphere where the composition varies with altitude, called the heterosphere. This article divides them by temperature, so I don't know where it fits. But for example, there's an altitude (depending on solar activity) at which helium is the dominant gas. See [1]. --Andrew 06:42, Apr 2, 2005 (UTC)
I stuck it in composition. --Andrew 03:25, Apr 10, 2005 (UTC)
The strucutre of the atmosphere is generally defined in three different ways. The most common is by temperature strucutre. The other two ways is by composition (i.e. the heterosphere and homosphere) and by "function" e.g. "ozonosphere". I'll work to make this clearer in the page. --kmcolo
[edit] Early atmosphere - a merge might be in order
In case people watching this article weren't aware of it, Miller-Urey_experiment#Earth's_early_atmosphere actually has more material on Earth's early atmosphere than is present here. It might be appropriate to move some of it here and include a link over there pointing to it. Bryan 23:21, 9 Apr 2005 (UTC)
- Whatever it is decided to do with these two articles, they need updating to reflect the (wonderful/beautiful imho) recent result of Tian et. al. [2] [3]. This paper was even reported on in Slashdot, it really looks like it may become a landmark in the history of ancient atmospheric science research. Urey-Miller is now fully back "in the game"! (yay! :o)--Deglr6328 02:36, 10 Apr 2005 (UTC)
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- Heh. I noticed this duplication between articles when I went to add information about those very results. :) I'm not an expert in the field, though, so by all means expand and improve on the material I added. Bryan 05:55, 10 Apr 2005 (UTC)
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- Nice research, that. I wonder how often experts considered or overlooked supersonic gas movement. One sometimes forgets the behavior of planetary-scale quantities of material. (SEWilco 18:46, 10 Apr 2005 (UTC))
- Any links to the concepts underlying the planetary formation process which they are using? (SEWilco 18:46, 10 Apr 2005 (UTC))
The new study indicates that up to 35 percent of the early atmosphere was oxygen (200 - 250 million years ago, bubbles of early atmosphere were found in an amber).
[edit] Refractive index etc.
If this is going to be the page on the air we breathe, it should have a section on the physical properties of ground-level air: refractive index, conductivity, electrical breakdown voltage, dielectric constant, and so on.
If not, there should be a page, maybe physical properties of air with just that sort of information (as well as ground-level composition and so forth). --Andrew 03:52, Apr 29, 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Atmospheric focus
It seems that this page has what I would call an editorial slant towards those interested in the atmosphere as it pertains to space and space travel. Though indeed this is interesting it would seem to me that the page should focus on the atmosphere with a slant towards those interested in the atmosphere. This is my observation and I will be working toward that goal. Let's discuss this here so as not to step on toes that should not be stepped on. kmcolo 17:00, 31 July 2005 (UTC)
- I think the orientation is toward the vertical levels of the atmosphere. There are separate articles for a number of processes within various layers, and you'll probably be adding a number of links to those which hadn't been connected. (SEWilco 02:15, 1 August 2005 (UTC))
[edit] Atmosphere and Gravity
I know this probably sound stupid but why dont the gas molecules in the atmosphere come fall on to the earths surface just like everyhting else. I mean they should, since they are not in orbit. Pranay ( pranay89@gmail.com )
- The gas molecules do respond to the effect of gravity. Atmospheric pressure drops with increasing altitude. But gravity is a weak force, and it can only compress the atmosphere to the point where the pressure pushing molecules up (due to collisions) equals the force down. See kinetic theory of gasses. Archimerged 14:42, 15 January 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Clouds
The whole article do not mention them. TestPilotImage:Eoraptor.jpg 23:16, 22 January 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Image needs to go
In his recent edit summary, William M. Connolley said: "Density and mass - Rm the quibbles from the graph: K, not deg K, is correct, but really doesn't need mentioning. Ditto the scale: it is clear enough. Put remaining text into caption, and smallify"
However, this whole graph (Image:Atmosphere model.png) is a misleading mess:
- There is, of course, the "Degrees Kelvin" problem.
- In addition, there is an improper symbol for kilometers (Km rather than km)
- The use of a carat to indicate superscript in "g/cm^3" isn't pretty, but is marginally acceptable, it is understandable that software might not be able to make superscripts, but it can probably use the ³ character.
- But the biggest problem is that there are two independent and unrelated graphs slammed together, with the crossover point of no significance whatsowever.
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- Furthermore, the background grid is strongly and clearly logarithmic, but the scale for the temperature graph is not logarithmic. Only the graph for density is logarithmic, which in itself might warrant a clear explanation of that fact in the caption. It is just to damn confusing to justify this abomination. Gene Nygaard 01:28, 8 February 2006 (UTC) Gene Nygaard 03:12, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
- I couldn't find a better one with a quick trawl, so I propose we leave it until someone finds a better one. If someone want to generate a better one they could try using the US Standard Atmosphere from here: http://www.pdas.com/m1.htm
- If I get time I'll try and do it. Its probably also worth including a whole section (or subsection) on the US Standard atmosphere as it is widely used. At the moment standard atmosphere redirects to Atmospheric pressure which is misleading as that article seems to be exclusively about Earth's MSLP.--NHSavage 08:58, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
Um. I shall defned this graph (its not mine, I didn't put it there, but...). "Km" and "Degrees Kelvin" are mere typographical problems, and minor ones at that. Ditto ^. Now, as to the "unrelated" variables: well, T and P are both atmos variables. Putting them on the same graph is reasonable. Then there is a crossover, which doesn't mean anything - but so what? On this height scale, its natural to plot log P, and natural to plot plain T. Its not a great graph or anything, but it does usefully illustrate the article, and I don't understand the degree of dislike GN has for it! William M. Connolley 09:09, 8 February 2006 (UTC).
[edit] Photosynthesis
Certainly, these two sentences are not accurate: 1. "Being the first to carry out oxygenic photosynthesis, they were able to convert carbon dioxide into oxygen, playing a major role in oxygenating the atmosphere." 2. "Photosynthesizing plants would later evolve and convert more carbon dioxide into oxygen."
During oxygenic photosynthesis, the water molucule is split and the oxygen from H2O is converted into the dioxygen (O2) molecule. The carbon in carbon dioxide is converted into organic matter (call it biomass or algal/bacterial matter). Although, some carbon dioxide is respired back out of the cell as carbon dioxide, there is generally a net fixation of carbon (or net conversion of carbon dioxide to organic matter).
--216.59.253.118 20:19, 15 February 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Not GA yet
This article was nominated on Wikipedia:Good articles/Nominations, but I feel it's not yet up to the required standards as the only reference cited does not appear to be adequate for verifying all the facts in the article. Worldtraveller 00:09, 12 March 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Question
I moved the following from the article to here:
- what about the exosphere?????????? that is very important. you do not state the temperature in the exosphere
It was in the subsection "Various atmospheric regions". I do not know the answer. - Liberatore(T) 12:46, 6 April 2006 (UTC)
A possible error!
I am in no position to write anything about the earth as I know very little about it's scientific properties but I think I found an error. "thermosphere: from 80–85 km to 640+ km, temperature increasing with height."
It would see to me that the thermosphere's tempature would decrease with height as it is the last layer and so close to space. Am I mistaken?
Brett
- It increases with height, according to every other website I looked at including [4], [5], [6], [7] and [8]. Art LaPella 03:21, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Two thoughts
How about some simple models - like the isothermal model - i guess kindof links in with the atmospheric pressure page???? is the air car link really worth having on this page? -deosnt really seem to link seriously with the subject. Wideofthemark
[edit] Reversion explanation
First, I reverted the unexplained change from 78% N2 and 21% O2 to 80% N2 and 19% O2, back to 78 and 21. These well-known figures can also be found in the body of the article and http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/factsheet/earthfact.html
I also changed the percentage of CO2 by mass from .035% back to .053%. The .035% figure probably came from the NASA reference http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/factsheet/earthfact.html , but that figure is "by volume, dry air", not by mass. I found the .053% figure at http://www.reference.com/browse/wiki/Earth's_atmosphere . Art LaPella 02:38, 1 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Splitting off air
I am considering splitting off the section on composition into a separate article at Air, along the lines of many (19, I believe) other wikipedias, such as de:Luft (separate from de: Erdatmosphäre. There seems to be plenty of information to make both articles substantial, and the air article could go into somewhat more detail (as the German article does). Rigadoun (talk) 17:25, 4 August 2006 (UTC)
- hmmm not sure. I can see why this might be a good idea in the future but I think for the moment it would be better to just expand this section until the content is large enough to warrant a seperate page. There is also a possible overlap with Atmospheric chemistry and the links to this article would have to be carefully thought through.--NHSavage
[edit] exists"
Here's some brilliant prose from the article:
- Although the atmosphere exists at heights of 1000 km and more, it is so thin as to be considered nonexistent.
—Pengo talk · contribs 14:40, 11 August 2006 (UTC)
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- This has to be sarcasm, but I don't understand the objection. Air molecules don't lay on the ground like water because they bounce off each other at widely varying speeds averaging about 1000 miles per hour. Most molecules bounce and fly miles above the earth, but they fall down eventually (a very few escape into space). The higher you look, the fewer molecules you find, and there is no clearcut limit. "How high is the atmosphere" is a semantic question - that is, it's about words, not about nature. The sentence looks good enough to me. How would you say it? Art LaPella 18:55, 11 August 2006 (UTC)
- It was a bit inelegant. I've tried to improve.--NHSavage 20:11, 11 August 2006 (UTC)
- This has to be sarcasm, but I don't understand the objection. Air molecules don't lay on the ground like water because they bounce off each other at widely varying speeds averaging about 1000 miles per hour. Most molecules bounce and fly miles above the earth, but they fall down eventually (a very few escape into space). The higher you look, the fewer molecules you find, and there is no clearcut limit. "How high is the atmosphere" is a semantic question - that is, it's about words, not about nature. The sentence looks good enough to me. How would you say it? Art LaPella 18:55, 11 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Neutrality of this section
The sub section "The evolution of the Earth's atmosphere" needs to be marked as a theory. We all know that carbon dating is inaccurate after a few 10s of thousand years (cannot think of the exact amount right this moment...) and that anything beyond that is based on unproven theories and speculation. Therefore this must be marked as a theory to keep neutrality.
I am going to put the word theory at the top of it linked with the page on theories, if this is removed without explanation it will be because someone wishes to put this foward as fact when it is not proven and that is not neutral. If you have a valid reason as to why this should not be there please post it here before removing this edit and if it is a good reason then fine but saying "this is what happened" is not a good reason when it is unproven —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Zealotii (talk • contribs) 06:20, 24 September 2006.
- Removed the theory link. The first paragraph of the section states:
- The history of the Earth's atmosphere prior to one billion years ago is poorly understood, but the following presents a plausible sequence of events. This remains an active area of research.
- Seems that is qualification enough. You seem to use the word proven in a manner that indicates a lack of understanding of how science works. Vsmith 16:46, 24 September 2006 (UTC)
"The history of the Earth's atmosphere prior to one billion years ago" is insinuating that the world has in fact existed for one billion years. Which is currently unprovable. Therefore it is stating as a fact that the world existed one billion years ago. Which is not a fact.
I suggest the opening of this sub-section be revised and changed to state at least a little more clearly that this is not a fact. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Zealotii (talk • contribs) 10:40, 24 September 2006.
- It's about as close to a fact as you're going to get in science, though. The scientific community's consensus is that there's overwhelming evidence for Earth being over a billion years old, the proposition that it's younger than that is an extreme minority notion that IMO doesn't warrant inclusion in every article that happens to mention Earth's age. Wikipedia:Neutral point of view#Undue weight covers this sort of thing. Bryan 23:36, 24 September 2006 (UTC)
Overwhelming evidence? Could you please at least give me links to this information as I would like to see this amazing evidence. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Zealotii (talk • contribs).
- Age of the Earth and History of Earth both contain an abundance of references, for a start. Also, please sign your posts using four tildes, like this: "
~~~~
" — Knowledge Seeker দ 05:32, 25 September 2006 (UTC)
Dating methods used in those examples are not proof the world is that old at all. For instance, radiocarbon in carbon dating (most common dating method) decays far to fast to ever work for anything past a few thousand years and any knowlagable Evolutionist knows this. It's half-life is only 5,730 years, in other words half of it decays away every 5,730 years. After 10 half lives there is but a thousandth of it remaining, on since, things like diamonds (apparently dated to 3 billion years in some cases) still have radiocarbon on them, they are far, far younger then what is said. The problem here is far to much on wikipedia and in evolution in general is accepted as fact, when it is NOT fact and is FAR from it. The neutrality of Wikipedia is general is non existent and a lie. This site has so many unproven methods and theories and calls them fact, or just accepts them as true. I request that entire section be either tagged obviously as theory or removed entirely.
Sorry I took so long to reply, I had things that needed doing. "Zealotii 09:34, 15 October 2006 (UTC)"
My theory tag removed again? Why are people having such a hard time with something so simple? The only reason there are so many people that accept this kind of thing is because they assume it be to true as evolutionists seem to take great delight in tagging their documents as fact. "Zealotii 09:51, 15 October 2006 (UTC)"
- Please stop wasting everyones time, including your own. If you want to debate evolution, go to an internet newsgroup. Quite why you think this stuff depends on radiocarbon dating I don't know... William M. Connolley 10:53, 15 October 2006 (UTC)
That was an example of many, my point was if it depends on ANY dating method "theory" we have now it is incorrect. I am not here to debate anything, you are preventing neutrality by not allowing a theory tag ON WHAT IS DAMNED WELL THEORY. If you were NEUTRAL you would not be here debating this with me. The truth is the truth. I am not here to debate anything. Only to correct what is being displayed as fact to theory, to prevent more wide spread and outrageous ignorance on the subject. "Zealotii 11:14, 15 October 2006 (UTC)"
Look, I will simply say this.
It IS a theory. You know this as well as I. Therefore I am CONTRIBUTING by FIXING an error which states it as fact which is INCORRECT.
There is no way to argue this save you want it removed because you want your views on this section and not the neutral truth, you want it to lean towards evolution. "Zealotii 11:18, 15 October 2006 (UTC)"
- If you want to discuss evolution, do it over there or better still at the appropriate newsgroup. Everything we "know" about the world is either superstition or theory. Much of it is accepted as "fact" and under any legal system I'm aware of - as the "theory" of gravity, which you ignore at your peril, or the "theory" of optics that you implicitely use whenever you think you see something first hand. The approximate age of the Earth (give or take a few million years) is not under any serious debate. --Stephan Schulz 11:30, 15 October 2006 (UTC)
...
Those examples are irrelevant. We can see them working everyday all day and it would only be named a theory because we may not fully understand it yet. But it is still there. This, on the other hand, has nothing to go by at all save disproven dating methods. The age of the earth is always under serious debate if you had not noticed since it is a key factor in evolution, which itself is always under serious debate. "Zealotii 11:47, 15 October 2006 (UTC)"
- Sorry to break it to you, but evolution is also not under serious debate among educated people. And even if it where, the age of the Earth is independent of evolution. Earth is known to be ancient (as in "billions of years old") by a number of independent and reinforcing dating processes, none of which is radiocarbon dating (which, btw. is not "disproved" either). But this discussion is off-topic here. Go to Age of the Earth if you must, but be prepared to back anything you claim up with reliable sources.--Stephan Schulz 15:03, 15 October 2006 (UTC)
No, there is no evidence or actual proven working methods. The problem with science these days is it is not science. It is people trying to prove one certain thing. Please show me reliable sources for your arguement with proof. Also, no, radiocarbon dating is flawed and any respected evolutionist scientist will tell you this. There is however, "evidence" that goes along like this: (direct quote from [9] READ THE SOURCES THIS INFORMATION IS FROM)"While it is common to cite verified predictions as ‘proof’ of a scientific law, this commits a basic logical fallacy called affirming the consequent.
1) Theory T predicts observation O; 2) O is observed; T is true.
To see why this does not follow, consider:
1) If I had just eaten a whole pizza, I would feel very full; 2) I feel very full; I have just eaten a whole pizza.
Finding certain things in substances does not mean the actual theories are correct. All evolutionist evidence thus far is inconclusive, based on this or assumptions/unproven hypothesis. Again, if you have this evidence please show it as I would love to see it. But if you are just one of those people that assume things to be true because they release millions of new theorys about the same thing so often, that it somehow becomes truth as they never decide to show it otherwise, please rethink your comment. "Zealotii 04:50, 18 October 2006 (UTC)"
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- Once again, if you would teach us benighted ones the world isn't a billion years old, the place to start is at Talk:Age of the Earth - it's off-topic here until you can show us the light there. If you aren't impressed by Wikipedian policy and habits, then call it Christian deference to those placed in authority over you, or something. Art LaPella 06:41, 18 October 2006 (UTC)
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- Agreed with Art. I'll put Talk:Age of the Earth on my watchlist. If you want to discuss these issues, go there (although it likely is still off-topic to a certain degree). Please first read something like the talkorigins age of the earth FAQ to understand the currently used dating methods and arguments for an old earth.--Stephan Schulz 13:35, 18 October 2006 (UTC)
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Again I am sorry for taking so long to reply, there were things that required my attention... I think I will go there and discuss these things further. I am well aware of the dating methods used and the current most popular, given its amazing half-life, radiometric dating (decay rate of isotopes). I also have many reasons why it is unrealiable and in some cases can help to show the oposite... But as you requested I shall not post such things here anymore. "Zealotii 10:06, 19 October 2006 (UTC)"
[edit] errors on page
This paragraph has errors: During the next few million years, water vapor condensed to form rain and oceans, which began to dissolve carbon dioxide. Approximately 50% of the carbon dioxide would be absorbed into the oceans. One of the earliest types of bacteria were the cyanobacteria. Fossil evidence indicates that these bacteria existed approximately 3.3 billion years ago and were the first oxygen-producing evolving phototropic organisms. They were responsible for the initial conversion of the earth's atmosphere from an anoxic state to an oxic state (that is, from a state without oxygen to a state with oxygen). Being the first to carry out oxygenic photosynthesis, they were able to convert carbon dioxide into oxygen, playing a major role in oxygenating the atmosphere.
1) First, there is no definitive evidence nor consensus that photosynthizing cyannobacteria were present on earth at 3.3 bya, though some scientists argue this. 2.6 ba or earlier is the scientifically safe statement -- see recent paper in nature, and tis references:
[[10]]
2) The paragraph fails to convey what we do and do not know about precambrian oxygen levels. See the same reference above as well as Goldblatt [[11]] This is not my field, and I'm working on another project of interest to me. Is there an earth scientist/ paleoecologist to look into this? I can supply a list of other pertinent references. Loco 00:01, 18 October 2006 (UTC)
Simple question.Why humans can see sky in a blue color.
- —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 81.132.165.246 (talk • contribs) 18:44, 20 December 2006.
[edit] Thickness of atmosphere. Could this actualized set of data be changed in the page?
Where it says:
However:
- 57.8% of the atmosphere by mass is below the summit of Mount Everest.
- 72% of the atmosphere by mass is below the common cruising altitude of commercial airliners (about 10000 m or 33000 ft).
- 99.99999% of the atmosphere by mass is below the highest X-15 plane flight on August 22, 1963, which reached an altitude of 354,300 ft or 108 km.
Therefore, most of the atmosphere (99.9999%) by mass is below 100 km, although in the rarefied region above this there are auroras and other atmospheric effects.
Should say:
However:
- 68.054% of the atmosphere by mass is below the summit of Mount Everest.
- 73.004% of the atmosphere by mass is below the common cruising altitude of commercial airliners (about 10000 m or 33000 ft).
- 99,000 072% is below 31200 m.
- 99,901 189% is below 48200 m.
- 99,990 117% is below 65100 m.
- 99,999 006% is below 79800 m.
- 99,999 901% is below 92900 m.
- 99,999 991% of the atmosphere by mass is below the highest X-15 plane flight on August 22, 1963, which reached an altitude of 354,300 ft or 108 km.
Therefore, most of the atmosphere (99,999 970%) by mass is below 100 km, although in the rarefied region above this there are auroras and other atmospheric effects. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by JustToHelp (talk • contribs) 19:50, 13 January 2007 (UTC).
- Just changed the unsourced numbers to published figures from a standard text. The above calculations by User:JustToHelp would appear to have WP:OR problems as he states the numbers were derived by spreadsheet calculations. Sourced published figures are preferred. Vsmith 20:14, 13 January 2007 (UTC)
Reverted JustToHelp's OR calculations again. This time he inserted them following the citation I had given for the tabulated data, thereby making it seem as though his numbers were cited. His values - calculated to six decimal places are quite absurd as the uncertainties of the data would make such precision meaningless. Let's stick with published values and forego the OR calculations. Vsmith 23:34, 15 January 2007 (UTC)
Would you please take a look to NRLMSISE-00 and/or so we can start talking about facts.
You say that 6 decimal numbers are absurd, then: why is there a 99.99997% number accepted?.
Look, i have had in the past a difficult time triyng to understand how thick the atmosphere was. Ther should be a limit we can accept as "enought". I looked to a lot of pages on internet and always there was no clear awnswer to this "perceived" limit. Then i discovered that i could help other to find a fast awnswer by posting at wikipedia. So, i downloaded all the nedded data from NRLMSISE-00 and build an "acceptable" answer to all. Then to help others i posted my findings on this page, more than a year ago. Do you think that it is needed to force others to calculate an awnswer because you dislike what i have posted?
Now that section just got changed and the verion you want to IMPOSE is not the best it could be IMHO. So i tried several times to improve, and the only awnswer you see fit is: ERASE ALL, IT'S NOSENSE. Do you think that it is needed to force others to calculate an awnswer because you dislike what i have posted?
Why dont look at the data and not your opinion that this is OR and MUST be erased. Do the data presented contradict the information you wnat to belive? Is wrong to try to improve on what is presented? Pleased DO READ the facts not opinions. If you dislike the form, not the facts, please help to correct. The facts, either you like them or not would persist and be there. Your opinions will change with time. JustToHelp 05:03, 16 January 2007 (UTC)
- OK, I looked at NRLMSISE-00. There should not be a limit on how high is enough - JustToHelp's own graph shows the air fades away gradually with no sharp limit. 99.99997% isn't a 6 decimal estimate if you think of it as the complement of 0.00003%, with 1 significant figure. JustToHelp's 73.004%, for instance, has 5 significant figures and a fraction of a degree temperature difference would be enough to make it wrong. The issue isn't whether to force others to calculate the figures - the issue is two competing sets of figures. Vsmith has provided documented figures, not his own calculations. JustToHelp's figures apparently come from [12], a website that provides calculations, but the underlying formulas aren't reviewed the same way as a scientific paper is. If JustToHelp addresses the problems above, the real scientists (that is, not me) will, um, have more time for him. Art LaPella 06:07, 16 January 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Observational Database?
A large observational database of many different atmospheric constituents from a host of platforms including UARS is available. This was created as part of ESA Envisat and NASA Aura validation. It is of general use. Do you think it should be added to the article text?
[edit] Density and Mass
Has anyone noticed that according to the graph "NRLMSISE-00 standard atmosphere model" the temperature RISES beyond 80km altitude to reach an amazing 460 degrees Celsius (!) in 150km altitude. Can the people who posted this graph perhaps look into this again and correct this nonsense? —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 218.186.9.5 (talk) 09:05, 2 March 2007 (UTC).
- The thermosphere article (and anything else I've read) agree that the temperature rises beyond 80 km: "Thermospheric temperatures increase with altitude...Temperatures are highly dependent on solar activity, and can rise to 2,000°C." Art LaPella 18:16, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
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- Yep. Don't confuse temperature with heat. It's very hot but there's not much of it, so it won't burn you. Think of the solar corona at millions of degrees. Such temperature inversions, with "vacuum" between to insulate them from conduction and convection, are possible. SBHarris 19:49, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Composition
According to the Nasa Water Vapour Project reported at http://www.engr.colostate.edu/~ramirez/ce_old/classes/ce422_ramirez/CE422_Web/WaterVapor/water_vapor_CE322.htm the average precipitatable column of water over the globe varies from 22 to 27.5 mm. This converts to 0.34 to 0.43% water in the atmosphere by volume or 0.21 to 0.27 % by mass.
The mass concentration given for carbon dioxide is in error. Carbon dioxide being 51% denser than air must make it greater by mass composition than by volume. A straight molecular weight calculation (ignoring deviation from ideal gas) gives a result of 0.058 % carbon dioxide by mass. It is not clear to me that laboratories take into account the deviation from ideal gas when calculating carbon dioxide concentrations by volume.
Errors in calculating the mass of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere give rise to the frequently quoted statistic that only 50% of human emmissions are retained in the atmosphere. The true figure over the last 40 years exceeds 60% and has exceeded 100% in some years.
Chris Seymour 05:58, 20 March 2007 (UTC)