Atmospheric temperature
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Atmospheric temperature is a way to measure how hot or cold the air is at different heights in the Earth's atmosphere. The temperature changes because of things like sunlight, water vapor in the air, and how high up you are. Scientists use a term called MAAT, which means Mean Annual Air Temperature. This talks about the average temperature of a place over a whole year.
Knowing about atmospheric temperature helps us understand weather and climate. It affects what clothes we wear and how plants grow. By studying these temperatures, scientists can predict changes and help protect our environment.
Near-surface air temperature
"Surface air temperature" redirects here; not to be confused with Soil temperature or Sea surface temperature.
For temperature measurements made by instruments, see Instrumental temperature record.
For temperature changes relevant to historical climate change over Earth's geologic past (distinguished from recent climate change), see Temperature record.
The temperature of the air close to Earth's surface is measured at weather stations using thermometers placed in special shelters, like a Stevenson screen. These thermometers are usually set about 1 to 2 metres above the ground. The World Meteorological Organization has rules for how this should be done.
The average temperature near the Earth's surface worldwide is about 14 °C.
Temperature versus altitude
Main article: Lapse rate
The temperature in the atmosphere changes depending on how high you go from the Earth's surface. The atmosphere has four main layers: the troposphere, stratosphere, mesosphere, and thermosphere.
The troposphere is the lowest layer. It stretches from the ground up to about 11 kilometers. It is warmest near the ground and gets colder as you go higher. This is where most of our weather happens. Above the troposphere is the stratosphere. It gets warmer as you go higher because of special gases that protect the Earth from harmful sun rays. The mesosphere is the next layer, and it is the coldest part of the atmosphere. The thermosphere is the top layer and can get very hot because it receives strong energy from the sun.
Temperature range
The change in temperature from the warmest part of the day to the coolest part of the night is called diurnal temperature variation. We can also look at temperature changes over a month or a year.
The size of temperature changes near the ground depends on several things, such as:
- Average air temperature
- Average humidity
- The way winds behave
- How close we are to large bodies of water, like the sea
The picture on the left shows temperature records from the city of Campinas, Brazil. The average temperature there is 22.4 °C, with the coolest temperature usually around 12.2 °C and the warmest around 29.9 °C. In July, the temperature might change from about 10 °C to 24 °C, while in January it might change from about 20 °C to 30 °C.
In places closer to the Equator, like Aracaju, Brazil, the temperature changes are smaller. The average temperature there is higher, with the coolest temperature around 21.9 °C and the warmest around 28.7 °C.
Lifted minimum temperature
See also: Surface temperature inversion
On very quiet and clear nights, the coldest air is often a little way above the ground, not right on it. This thin layer of cold air is called the Ramdas layer. It was named after a scientist who first noticed this in 1932. He studied temperatures at different heights at weather stations in India. This happens because of how heat moves away from the ground.
Global temperature
See also: Global surface temperature, Instrumental temperature record, Global temperature record, and Schumann resonances § Global temperature
In weather and climate, global temperature is the average temperature of Earth. Scientists find this by checking temperature readings from satellites and instruments on the ground. They use these readings to make databases and computer models. To learn about temperatures from long ago, they look at clues from nature, called proxy data.
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Atmospheric temperature, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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