Air is real stuff made of zillions of tiny molecules, and they're constantly bumping into everything. That steady drumming of hits is air pressure.
What's actually happening
Air feels like nothing, but it is made of molecules with mass — about a kilogram of them stacked above every square centimetre of ground, in a column reaching to the edge of space. All that weight presses down, and the air at the bottom passes the squeeze along in every direction through collisions: roughly ten trillion trillion molecular impacts per square centimetre per second. That relentless drumming is air pressure: about 101,000 newtons on every square metre at sea level.
Why aren't you crushed? Because you are not a hollow shell holding back a vacuum. The air inside your lungs, ears, and tissues pushes outward exactly as hard as the atmosphere pushes in. Pressure only does dramatic, visible things when the two sides of a surface stop matching — and then it does them instantly. Pump the air out of a steel drum and the unopposed atmosphere flattens it like a stepped-on can.
Most "suction" in your life is actually this push in disguise. A drinking straw doesn't pull liquid up — you lower the pressure in your mouth and the atmosphere pushes the drink up the straw. Suction cups, vacuum cleaners, plungers: none of them pull. They all just remove air from one side and let the weight of the sky do the work.
- 1Fill a glass right to the brim with water and lay a postcard or stiff card flat across the top.
- 2Hold the card in place, flip the glass upside down over a sink, and let go of the card.
- 3The card stays, holding back the water. The atmosphere pushing up on the card is stronger than the weight of the water pushing down — by a comfortable margin.