Air contains about 78% nitrogen and 21% oxygen independent of altitude (up to 100 km). Why is this? Shouldn't the concentration of nitrogen increase with higher altitudes since nitrogen has a lower density than oxygen?
1 Answers
Shouldn't the concentration of nitrogen increase with higher altitudes since nitrogen has a lower density than oxygen?
No, it shouldn't, at least not up to 100 km or so. Look at your graph, which shows that even argon is well-mixed throughout the lower atmosphere (the troposphere, stratosphere, and mesosphere). Argon atoms are considerably more massive than are carbon dioxide molecules, which in turn are considerably more massive than oxygen and nitrogen molecules, and yet all of these (along with all of the long-lived gases in the atmosphere) are well-mixed throughout the lower atmosphere.
The reason is that the lower atmosphere is dense enough to support turbulence while the upper atmosphere is not. The turbopause marks the somewhat fuzzy boundary below which turbulent mixing dominates over diffusion and above which it's diffusion that dominates.
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