International Standard Atmosphere should not be confused with Standard conditions for temperature and pressure.
The International Standard Atmosphere (ISA) is a static atmospheric model of how the pressure, temperature, density, and viscosity of the Earth's atmosphere change over a wide range of altitudes or elevations. It has been established to provide a common reference for temperature and pressure and consists of tables of values at various altitudes, plus some formulas by which those values were derived. The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) publishes the ISA as an international standard, ISO 2533:1975.[1] Other standards organizations, such as the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) and the United States Government, publish extensions or subsets of the same atmospheric model under their own standards-making authority.
The ISA mathematical model divides the atmosphere into layers with an assumed linear distribution of absolute temperature T against geopotential altitude h.[2] The other two values (pressure P and density ρ) are computed by simultaneously solving the equations resulting from:
dP | |
dh |
=-\rhog
P=\rhoR\rmT
Air density must be calculated in order to solve for the pressure, and is used in calculating dynamic pressure for moving vehicles. Dynamic viscosity is an empirical function of temperature, and kinematic viscosity is calculated by dividing dynamic viscosity by the density.
Thus the standard consists of a tabulation of values at various altitudes, plus some formulas by which those values were derived. To accommodate the lowest points on Earth, the model starts at a base geopotential altitude of 610m (2,000feet) below sea level, with standard temperature set at 19 °C. With a temperature lapse rate of −6.5 °C (-11.7 °F) per km (roughly −2 °C (-3.6 °F) per 1,000 ft), the table interpolates to the standard mean sea level values of 15C temperature, 101325Pa (1 atm) pressure, and a density of 1.225kg/m3. The tropospheric tabulation continues to 36089order=flipNaNorder=flip, where the temperature has fallen to NaNC, the pressure to 22632Pa, and the density to 0.3639kg/m3. Between 11 km and 20 km, the temperature remains constant.[3] [4]
0< | --These values are correct: the troposphere starts BELOW sea level at a temperature WARMER than 15 degrees and a pressure GREATER than one bar. DO NOT change them. --> | Troposphere | 0 | 0 | -6.5 | +15.0 (288.15) | 101,325 | 1.225 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Tropopause | 11,000 | 11,019 | 0.0 | −56.5 (216.65) | 22632 | 0.3639 | |
2 | Stratosphere | 20,000 | 20,063 | +1.0 | −56.5 (216.65) | 5474.9 | 0.0880 | |
3 | Stratosphere | 32,000 | 32,162 | +2.8 | −44.5 (228.65) | 868.02 | 0.0132 | |
4 | Stratopause | 47,000 | 47,350 | 0.0 | −2.5 (270.65) | 110.91 | 0.0014 | |
5 | Mesosphere | 51,000 | 51,412 | -2.8 | −2.5 (270.65) | 66.939 | 0.0009 | |
6 | Mesosphere | 71,000 | 71,802 | -2.0 | −58.5 (214.65) | 3.9564 | 0.0001 | |
7 | Mesopause | 84,852 | 86,000 | — | -86.204 (186.946) | 0 | 0 |
lapse rate given per kilometer of geopotential altitude (A positive lapse rate (λ > 0) means temperature increases with height)
In the above table, geopotential altitude is calculated from a mathematical model that adjusts the altitude to include the variation of gravity with height, while geometric altitude is the standard direct vertical distance above mean sea level (MSL).[2]
z=
r0h | |
r0-h |
The ISA model is based on average conditions at mid latitudes, as determined by the ISO's TC 20/SC 6 technical committee. It has been revised from time to time since the middle of the 20th century.
The ISA models a hypothetical standard day to allow a reproducible engineering reference for calculation and testing of engine and vehicle performance at various altitudes. It does not provide a rigorous meteorological model of actual atmospheric conditions (for example, changes in barometric pressure due to wind conditions). Neither does it account for humidity effects; air is assumed to be dry and clean and of constant composition. Humidity effects are accounted for in vehicle or engine analysis by adding water vapor to the thermodynamic state of the air after obtaining the pressure and density from the standard atmosphere model.
Non-standard (hot or cold) days are modeled by adding a specified temperature delta to the standard temperature at altitude, but pressure is taken as the standard day value. Density and viscosity are recalculated at the resultant temperature and pressure using the ideal gas equation of state. Hot day, Cold day, Tropical, and Polar temperature profiles with altitude have been defined for use as performance references, such as United States Department of Defense MIL-STD-210C, and its successor MIL-HDBK-310.[5]
The International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) published their "ICAO Standard Atmosphere" as Doc 7488-CD in 1993. It has the same model as the ISA, but extends the altitude coverage to 80 kilometers (262,500 feet).[6]
The ICAO Standard Atmosphere, like the ISA, does not contain water vapor.
Some of the values defined by ICAO are:
Temperature °C | Pressure hPa | Lapse rate °C/1000 ft | Lapse rate C/1000 m | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 km MSL | 15.0 | 1013.25 | +1.98 (tropospheric) | +6.5 (tropospheric) | |
11 km 36 000 ft | -56.5 | 226.00 | 0.00 (stratospheric) | 0.00 (stratospheric) | |
20 km 65 000 ft | -56.5 | 54.70 | -0.3 (stratospheric) | -0.1 (stratospheric) | |
32 km 105 000 ft | -44.5 | 8.68 |
Aviation standards and flying rules are based on the International Standard Atmosphere. Airspeed indicators are calibrated on the assumption that they are operating at sea level in the International Standard Atmosphere where the air density is 1.225 kg/m3.
Physical properties of the ICAO Standard Atmosphere are:[7]
Density | 1.225 kg m-3 | |
Kinematic viscosity | 1.4607 × 10-5 m2 s-1 | |
Dynamic viscosity | 1.7894 × 10-5 kg m-1 s-1 | |
Molar volume | 2.3645 × 10-2 m3 mol-1 | |
Molecular weight | 28.966 | |
Thermal conductivity | 2.5339 × 10-2 W m-1 K-1 | |
Mean free path | 6.6317 × 10-8 m | |
Collision frequency | 6.9204 × 109 s-1 | |
Particle speed | 4.5894 × 102 m s-1 | |
Number density | 2.5475 × 1025 m-3 |
The U.S. Standard Atmosphere is a set of models that define values for atmospheric temperature, density, pressure and other properties over a wide range of altitudes. The first model, based on an existing international standard, was published in 1958 by the U.S. Committee on Extension to the Standard Atmosphere,[8] and was updated in 1962,[9] 1966,[10] and 1976.[11] The U.S. Standard Atmosphere, International Standard Atmosphere and WMO (World Meteorological Organization) standard atmospheres are the same as the ISO International Standard Atmosphere for altitudes up to 32 km.[12] [13]
NRLMSISE-00 is a newer model of the Earth's atmosphere from ground to space, developed by the US Naval Research Laboratory taking actual satellite drag data into account. A primary use of this model is to aid predictions of satellite orbital decay due to atmospheric drag. The COSPAR International Reference Atmosphere (CIRA) 2012 and the ISO 14222 Earth Atmosphere Density standard both recommend NRLMSISE-00 for composition uses.
JB2008 is a newer model of the Earth's atmosphere from 120 km to 2000 km, developed by the US Air Force Space Command and Space Environment Technologies taking into account realistic solar irradiances and time evolution of geomagnetic storms.[14] It is most useful for calculating satellite orbital decay due to atmospheric drag. Both CIRA 2012 and ISO 14222 recommend JB2008 for mass density in drag uses.