Chemical Engineering - Chemical Engineering Basics - Discussion
Discussion Forum : Chemical Engineering Basics - Section 1 (Q.No. 11)
11.
In troposphere (the weather domain), the temperature 't' at height 'h' above the sea level in metres is given by (where, temperature at sea level is 15°C and t is in °C.)
Discussion:
19 comments Page 2 of 2.
Ankit sahu said:
8 years ago
I think it's based on lapse rate, 6.5 degree c per 1 km.
Devendra kumar said:
8 years ago
Please explain it in detail.
(1)
K.Maheshkumar said:
8 years ago
Please explain it.
Punithasenthilkumar said:
7 years ago
Please explain this.
DIPS GUND said:
7 years ago
In troposphere according to lapse rate as increase in altitude of 1km 6.5 c temp decreases.
Abhishek Kumar said:
6 years ago
In the troposphere, the variation of temperature with altitude is given by the equation
T = T0 " λ h.
Where T0 is the sea level temperature, T is the temperature at the altitude h and λ is the temperature lapse rate in the troposphere.
λ = 0.0065 K/m in the troposphere.
T = T0 " λ h.
Where T0 is the sea level temperature, T is the temperature at the altitude h and λ is the temperature lapse rate in the troposphere.
λ = 0.0065 K/m in the troposphere.
Salunke Mahesh said:
5 years ago
Which formula to use? explain, please
(1)
BHAVESH LALWANI said:
5 years ago
@Abhishek Kumar
You say temperature lapse rate in troposphere is 0.0065.
K/m, here its unit in K( kelvin ) and in question unit is in C (Celcius).
You say temperature lapse rate in troposphere is 0.0065.
K/m, here its unit in K( kelvin ) and in question unit is in C (Celcius).
(1)
Abhiram said:
4 years ago
It was not in k/m, it was c/km.
So, it was converted to metre. That's why we get it as 0.0065 celsius/metre.
So, it was converted to metre. That's why we get it as 0.0065 celsius/metre.
(2)
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