Composition and Structure of Atmosphere
"The atmosphere is a thin, fragile veil — but without it, Earth would be as dead as the Moon."
1. Chapter Overview
The atmosphere is the GASEOUS ENVELOPE surrounding the Earth, held by GRAVITY. This chapter covers: (1) the COMPOSITION of the atmosphere — what gases it's made of, and (2) the STRUCTURE — how it's organised into FIVE DISTINCT LAYERS, each with different temperature behaviours.
2. Composition of the Atmosphere
Permanent Gases (Constant Proportion)
| Gas | Percentage |
|---|---|
| Nitrogen (N₂) | 78.08% |
| Oxygen (O₂) | 20.95% |
| Argon (Ar) | 0.93% |
| Others (Ne, He, Kr, Xe) | Trace |
Variable Gases (Varying Proportion)
| Gas | Role |
|---|---|
| Water Vapour (H₂O) | Varies 0-4%. Absorbs heat. Source of clouds and precipitation. DECREASES with altitude. |
| Carbon Dioxide (CO₂) | ~0.04% (420 ppm). Greenhouse gas. Absorbs outgoing heat. INCREASING due to human activity. |
| Ozone (O₃) | In STRATOSPHERE: ABSORBS UV radiation (protects life). In TROPOSPHERE: pollutant. |
Particulates (Dust, Salt, Smoke)
- Solid and liquid particles suspended in air
- Sources: volcanic eruptions, dust storms, sea spray, industrial emissions
- Act as condensation nuclei (particles around which water droplets form → clouds)
3. Structure of the Atmosphere — Five Layers
Based on TEMPERATURE change with altitude
| Layer | Altitude Range | Temperature Trend | Key Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Troposphere | 0–13 km (avg; varies from 8 km at poles to 18 km at equator) | DECREASES with height at ~6.5°C/km (normal lapse rate) | ALL WEATHER occurs here. Contains 75% of atmospheric mass and nearly ALL water vapour. Top = TROPOPAUSE. |
| Stratosphere | 13–50 km | INCREASES with height | Contains OZONE LAYER (15-35 km). Ozone absorbs UV → heats up. Aircraft fly here (stable, no weather). Top = STRATOPAUSE. |
| Mesosphere | 50–85 km | DECREASES with height | Coldest layer (-90°C at top). Meteors BURN UP here. Top = MESOPAUSE. |
| Thermosphere (Ionosphere) | 85–600 km | INCREASES with height (up to 1500°C+) | Temperature rises sharply (absorbs UV/X-rays). RADIO WAVES reflected → long-distance communication. AURORA occurs here. |
| Exosphere | 600+ km | Gradual transition to space | Lightest gases (H, He) escape into space. EXTREMELY thin atmosphere. Gradual boundary between atmosphere and SPACE. |
Why Temperature INCREASES in the Stratosphere?
- OZONE in the stratosphere absorbs ULTRAVIOLET (UV) radiation from the Sun
- Absorption of UV → HEAT → temperature RISES with altitude (INVERSION)
- This is crucial: ozone ABSORBS UV that would otherwise reach the surface and harm life
4. The Tropopause — Where Weather Stops
- Boundary between troposphere and stratosphere
- Weather is CONFINED to the troposphere
- Jet streams (fast winds) occur near the tropopause
5. Exam Focus
- Composition — permanent vs variable gases (nitrogen, oxygen, water vapour, CO₂, ozone)
- Five layers — names, altitude ranges, temperature trends, key features
- Ozone layer location and function (stratosphere, absorbs UV)
- Why the troposphere contains nearly all weather
- Tropopause significance
6. Common Mistakes
- Temperature always decreases with altitude — NO. Temperature DECREASES in the troposphere and mesosphere, but INCREASES in the stratosphere (ozone absorbs UV) and thermosphere.
- The ozone layer is in the upper atmosphere (thermosphere) — NO. The ozone layer is in the STRATOSPHERE (15-35 km). Different layers, different functions.
- Water vapour is a permanent gas — It's VARIABLE (0-4%) and decreases with altitude. Nearly ALL water vapour is in the troposphere.
7. Conclusion
The atmosphere is a layered, life-sustaining envelope:
- Composition: 78% N₂, 21% O₂, trace variable gases (H₂O, CO₂, O₃)
- Troposphere: Where we live, where weather happens
- Stratosphere: Where the ozone layer protects us from UV
- Mesosphere: Where meteors burn up
- Thermosphere: Where auroras dance and radio waves bounce
Five layers. One atmosphere. All life depends on this thin gaseous blanket.
