Definition
The atmospheric pressure measured at a weather station's actual elevation, representing the weight of the column of air directly above that point. It is recorded by a barometer and used as the raw input for producing sea-level pressure values plotted on weather charts.
Plain English
The pressure of the air pressing down on the ground at a specific location, measured right where the station sits.
Context Anchor
Seen in weather discussions, surface weather charts, and explanations of how pressure changes affect aviation weather and altimeter use.
Derivation
From Latin superficies, meaning 'the top or outer face of something.' Surface pressure is simply the air pressure at the Earth's outer face, as opposed to pressure measured aloft.
Why Pilots Care
Correct surface pressure values allow pilots to set their altimeters accurately, ensuring proper altitude awareness during flight.
Grounding Statement
Picture a column of air above an airport pressing downward; surface pressure is the strength of that push at the ground.
Intuition Check
Surface pressure does not mean pressure on the runway pavement itself. It means the air pressure at or near the Earth’s surface at that location.
Example Sentence 1
The forecaster noted that surface pressure was falling rapidly across the region, suggesting an approaching low.
Example Sentence 2
A lower surface pressure at the departure airport indicated the possibility of higher density altitude.