EdenKhan
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Im pretty bad at these physics math problems and our book doesn't go over how to do them very much so I was wondering if I could get some help..
The problem is The weight of the atmosphere above 1 square meter of the Earth's surface is 100 000 Newtons. If the density of the atmosphere were a constant 1.2 kg/m(cubed), calculate where the top of the atmosphere would be.
Okay so we have the weight of the atmosphere as 100,000 Newtons, the density is 1.2 kg/m(cubed). We learned that the pressure of the atmosphere is 100,000 Newtons per meter squared, or 100 kilo pascals.
There a special formula in our to calculate how high the atmosphere is based on the density or the pressure?
thanks very much
The problem is The weight of the atmosphere above 1 square meter of the Earth's surface is 100 000 Newtons. If the density of the atmosphere were a constant 1.2 kg/m(cubed), calculate where the top of the atmosphere would be.
Okay so we have the weight of the atmosphere as 100,000 Newtons, the density is 1.2 kg/m(cubed). We learned that the pressure of the atmosphere is 100,000 Newtons per meter squared, or 100 kilo pascals.
There a special formula in our to calculate how high the atmosphere is based on the density or the pressure?
thanks very much