Search Header Logo
Savvas the Behavior of Gases

Savvas the Behavior of Gases

Assessment

Presentation

Science

9th - 12th Grade

Hard

Created by

Joseph Anderson

FREE Resource

21 Slides • 18 Questions

1

media

Behavior of Gases

How are Pressure & Volume Related

2

media

3

media
media

13.1 Gases, Pressure, and the Atmosphere

What’s in Earth’s atmosphere (nitrogen)

Nitrogen (N) gas makes up 78% of Earth’s atmosphere

Released by volcanoes and decaying organisms

Protein contains nitrogen

Nitrogen is converted into nitrates (NO) by nitrogen-fixing bacteria in
the soil

Plants absorb nitrates from the soil and use them to make proteins

We eat plants or meat to obtain these proteins

4

media

5) What are the 2 primary uses of the Nitrogen in the atmosphere?

5

Multiple Choice

Earth's current atmosphere is
1
78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen, 0.9% argon and 0.037% carbon dioxide
2
78% oxygen, 21%nitrogen, 0.9% argon, 0.037% carbon dioxide
3
78% nitrogen, 21% argon, 1% oxygen
4
78% oxygen, 21% nitrogen, 1% carbon dioxide

6

Multiple Choice

What gas makes up 21% of Earth's Atmosphere?

1

Nitrogen

2

Oxygen

3

Ozone

4

None of the Above

7

media

13.1 Gases, Pressure, and the Atmosphere

What’s in Earth’s atmosphere (oxygen)

The second most abundant gas is oxygen (O), which makes up 21% of Earth’s
atmosphere

Carried by the Blood Hemoglobin on the RED BLOOD CELLS & used to produce
ENERGY

0.93% is made up of Argon

0.04% is made up of carbon dioxide

The rest is tiny amounts of neon, helium, methane, krypton, and hydrogen, which we
call trace gases

8

media

13.1 Gases, Pressure, and the Atmosphere

What’s in Earth’s atmosphere are the (other Gases)

0.93% is made up of Argon

0.04% is made up of carbon dioxide

The rest is tiny amounts of neon, water vapor, helium, methane, krypton, and hydrogen,
which we call trace gases.

9

media
media

Why our Atmosphere Exists

Earth’s Gravity Holds all these gases down

Mercury is too small to hold atmospheric gases

10

media
media

13.1 Gases, Pressure, and the Atmosphere

Atmospheres of Earth, Venus, and Mars
An atmosphere is a layer of gases surrounding a
planet

The atmospheres of Venus, Earth, and Mars were
formed in similar ways

Life uses photosynthesis to obtain energy from the
Sun

This process breaks down carbon dioxide, uses
carbon to build the organism, and releases oxygen
into the air

11

media
media

13.1 Gases, Pressure, and the Atmosphere

Atmospheres of Earth, Venus, and Mars (cont.)

Organisms DIE and DECOMPOSE, some of the
carbon from their bodies gets released as
carbon dioxide back into the air

Some CARBON from these organisms stay on
the ground and is stored inside the ground

12

media
media

13.1 Gases, Pressure, and the Atmosphere

Atmospheres of Earth, Venus, and Mars (cont.)

Earth stores Carbon

Some marine organisms use the carbon dioxide
dissolved in the ocean to form shells of calcium
carbonate

When these organisms die they settle at the bottom
of the ocean floor and this carbon is stored

Fossil fuels also store this carbon as oil, coal, and
natural gas

13

media

Releasing Carbon Dioxide

14

media

15

Multiple Choice

Earth's atmosphere is important to living things because it
1
contains dust and other particles
2
is very thin compared to the size of Earth
3
provides all the gases that living things need to survive
4
maintains a constant relative humidity

16

Multiple Choice

When you breathe in, you breathe in mostly which gas?
1
oxygen
2
carbon dioxide
3
nitrogen
4
argon

17

Multiple Choice

TRUE or FALSE?
All of the carbon in existence is continually recycled in the carbon cycle.
1
True
2
False

18

Multiple Choice

When humans burn fossil fuels, most of the carbon quickly enters the                       as carbon dioxide.
1
Water
2
Atmosphere
3
Sun
4
Air

19

Multiple Choice

Which one of these does not add CO2 to the atmosphere?
1
cooking with gas
2
planting trees
3
burning wood
4
riding in a bus

20

Multiple Choice

Where did the nitrogen in Earth’s atmosphere come from?

1

Plants

2

Volcanoes and decaying organisms

3

Burning fossil fuel

4

Helicopters

21

Multiple Choice

What was the Earth's early atmosphere like ?

1

Similar to Mars and Venus. A large amount of carbon dioxide,little or no oxygen small amounts of other gases, such as ammonia and methane

2

Similar to Mercury. A large amount of oxygen, sodium and hydrogen.

3

Similar to Jupiter. A large amount of hydrogen and helium.

4

Similar to Pluto. A large amount of nitrogen.

22

media
media

13.1 Gases, Pressure, and the Atmosphere

What is atmospheric pressure?

The pressure of air molecules in the atmosphere is a result of the weight of a column of
air pressing down on an area (air pressing down on you)

Atmospheric pressure is a measurement of the force of air molecules per unit of area
in the atmosphere at a given altitude.

The more air above you, the MORE AIR PRESSURE

23

media
media

13.1 Gases, Pressure, and the Atmosphere

What is atmospheric pressure?

At sea level, the weight of the column of air above a person is
about 9,800 newtons (N), which is 2,200 pounds

This is equal to the weight of a small car

Why aren’t we crushed by this pressure?

There is air inside our bodies that is pushing out with the same
pressure, so the forces are balanced

Our skeletons are designed to withstand the pressure of our
environment as well

24

Multiple Choice

The pressure exerted by the weight of air is called

1

atmospheric pressure

2

atmospheric temperature

3

altitude

4

density

25

media
media

13.1 Gases, Pressure, and the Atmosphere

Barometers and units of pressure

Atmospheric pressure is measured with an instrument
called a barometer

old barometer used mercury

It consists of a tube that is sealed at one end and
partially filled with mercury

The open end of the tube faces down into a dish of
mercury

As air presses down on the mercury in the dish, it forces
the liquid in the tube to rise

26

media
media

13.1 Gases, Pressure, and the Atmosphere

Aneroid Barometers

Mercury barometers have a downside: Mercury is a poisonous
liquid, and it creates unhealthy vapors

Most barometers we use today have an airtight cylinder made of
thin metal

The walls of the cylinder are squeezed inward when the
atmospheric pressure is high

At lower pressures, the walls bulge out

A dial attached to the cylinder moves as the cylinder changes
shape, this measures the pressure

27

media

28

media
media

13.1 Gases, Pressure, and the Atmosphere

Atmospheric pressure and altitude

Atmospheric pressure decreases with
more altitude

This is because you have less air
molecules above you forcing their
weight on you as you go higher

At Sea Level is where you would the
most of air molecules above you

29

Multiple Choice

Which of the following measures air pressure?

1
Thermometer
2
Barometer
3
Wind Vane
4
Hygrometer

30

media
media

31

media
media
media

13.1 Gases, Pressure, and the Atmosphere

Atmospheric pressure and altitude

The graph shows that as altitude increases the atmospheric
pressure decreases rapidly (exponentially)

32

Multiple Choice

Atmospheric pressure increases (gets bigger) as altitude increases (the higher up you go)

1

true

2

false

33

Multiple Choice

How do greenhouse gases affect weather and atmosphere conditions on Earth?

1

They decrease air temperature by blocking solar energy in the stratosphere.

2

They increase air temperature by reradiating solar energy in the troposphere.

3

They decrease air temperature by blocking solar energy in the troposphere.

4

They increase air temperature by reradiating solar energy in the stratosphere.

34

Multiple Choice

Which of the following is the correct composition of Earth’s modern atmosphere?

1

78% oxygen, 21% nitrogen, 1% other

2

78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen, 1% other

3

50% oxygen, 50% nitrogen

4

75% oxygen, 25% nitrogen

35

Multiple Choice

Which two gases make up 99% of gases in the atmosphere?

1

Nitrogen and Oxygen

2

Nitrogen and Carbon Dioxide

3

Oxygen and Methane

4

Ozone and Argon

36

Multiple Choice

Put the layers in the atmosphere in the correct order, starting with closest to Earth.

1

Stratosphere, Troposphere, Thermosphere, Mesosphere

2

Troposphere, Stratosphere, Thermosphere, Mesosphere

3

Thermosphere, Mesosphere, Stratosphere, Troposphere

4

Troposphere, Stratosphere, Mesosphere, Thermosphere

37

Multiple Choice

Question image

which layer of the atmosphere has the most pressure?

1

thermosphere

2

mesosphere

3

stratosphere

4

troposphere

38

Multiple Choice

Question image

Which layer of the atmosphere has the most mass? (80% of the mass actually!)

1

stratosphere

2

troposphere

3

mesosphere

4

thermosphere

39

media
media

Key Topics

20) Where does Earth’s Nitrogen come from & how does it get into our bodies?

21) What’s the 2nd most abundant gas & where does it come from?

22) What is Atmospheric pressure & how does it relate to your altitude?

23) Why doesn’t air pressure crush our body?
24) Use the chart on slide on this page to calculate the following
a. 2 atm = ___________ mm Hg
b. 4.5 atm = ____________pa
c. 35 psi = _____________atm
d. 1,850 mm Hg = ________atm
e. 45psi = _______pa

media

Behavior of Gases

How are Pressure & Volume Related

Show answer

Auto Play

Slide 1 / 39

SLIDE