A "unit of area" has no mass (it has no volume).
That depends what you want to measure: its length, width, weight, mass, color, volume, surface area, air resistance, etc.
The measure of the atmosphere that tells us how much vibrational energy the air contains per unit mass is temperature. Temperature is a measure of the average kinetic energy of the molecules in the air, including their vibrational energy.
That is usually described in units of pressure - force per unit area. The SI unit for pressure is the pascal, equivalent to newton/meter2.
No, air pressure is a measure of the force exerted by air molecules on a unit area. It does not directly indicate how heavy the air is. The weight of air is determined by its mass, which is influenced by factors such as temperature, humidity, and elevation.
The measure of the force exerted by air molecules on a surface per unit area is air pressure.
i can find the mass of the air by comparing the volume of unit vaccum (ie)1 unit of course with the 1 unit of volume of air and then can find its density by examining the intramolecular force in the air particles and then by formula, density= mass/volume its simple
Type your answer here... grams
No, pressure is a measure of the force that air is putting on an object, not a mass. The air itself has mass, but not the pressure.
degrese
As far as I know, there is no measure of movement of air, but if you really are persistent, you can use balloons.
What is normally used here is not a force, but a force per unit area; this is called pressure. The SI unit for pressure is the pascal.
it is AIR PRESSURE