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  2. Geopotential height - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geopotential_height

    Geopotential height plays an important role in atmospheric and oceanographic studies. The differential form above may be substituted into the hydrostatic equation and ideal gas law in order to relate pressure to ambient temperature and geopotential height for measurement by barometric altimeters regardless of latitude or geometric elevation:

  3. Barometric formula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barometric_formula

    Pressure as a function of the height above the sea level. There are two equations for computing pressure as a function of height. The first equation is applicable to the atmospheric layers in which the temperature is assumed to vary with altitude at a non null lapse rate of : = [,, ()] ′, The second equation is applicable to the atmospheric layers in which the temperature is assumed not to ...

  4. Geopotential - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geopotential

    Geopotential is the potential of the Earth's gravity field. For convenience it is often defined as the negative of the potential energy per unit mass , so that the gravity vector is obtained as the gradient of the geopotential, without the negation.

  5. International Standard Atmosphere - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Standard...

    The equation that relates the two altitudes are (where z is the geometric altitude, h is the geopotential altitude, and r 0 = 6,356,766 m in this model): = Note that the Lapse Rates cited in the table are given as °C per kilometer of geopotential altitude, not geometric altitude.

  6. Quasi-geostrophic equations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quasi-geostrophic_equations

    Equation (17) can be used to find from a known field . Alternatively, it can also be used to predict the evolution of the geopotential field given an initial distribution of and suitable boundary conditions by using an inversion process.

  7. Atmospheric model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atmospheric_model

    A 96-hour forecast of 850 mbar geopotential height and temperature from the Global Forecast System. In atmospheric science, an atmospheric model is a mathematical model constructed around the full set of primitive, dynamical equations which govern atmospheric motions.

  8. Primitive equations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primitive_equations

    The primitive equations are a set of nonlinear partial differential equations that are ... is the geopotential ... modulated by coefficients related to height and ...

  9. Pressure altitude - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pressure_altitude

    In aviation, pressure altitude is the height above a standard datum plane (SDP), which is a theoretical level where the weight of the atmosphere is 29.921 inches of mercury (1,013.2 mbar; 14.696 psi) as measured by a barometer. [2]