what is normal lapse rate
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Lapse rate, rate of change in temperature observed while moving upward through the Earth’s atmosphere. The lapse rate is considered positive when the temperature decreases with elevation, zero when the temperature is constant with elevation, and negative when the temperature increases with elevation (temperature inversion). The lapse rate of nonrising air—commonly referred to as the normal, or environmental, lapse rate—is highly variable, being affected by radiation, convection, and condensation; it averages about 6.5 °C per kilometre (18.8 °F per mile) in the lower atmosphere (troposphere). It differs from the adiabatic lapse rate, which involves temperature changes due to the rising or sinking of an air parcel. Adiabatic lapse rates are usually differentiated as dry or moist.
The dry adiabatic lapse rate for air depends only on the specific heat capacity of air at constant pressureand the acceleration due to gravity. The dry adiabatic lapse rate for the Earth’s atmosphere equals 9.8 °C per kilometre (28.3 °F per mile); thus, the temperature of an air parcel that ascends or descends 5 km (3 miles) would fall or rise 49 °C (85 °F), respectively.
The dry adiabatic lapse rate for air depends only on the specific heat capacity of air at constant pressureand the acceleration due to gravity. The dry adiabatic lapse rate for the Earth’s atmosphere equals 9.8 °C per kilometre (28.3 °F per mile); thus, the temperature of an air parcel that ascends or descends 5 km (3 miles) would fall or rise 49 °C (85 °F), respectively.
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When their is an ascent of 165 metres there is a fall of 1°c of temperature, which is termed as normal lapse rate
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