Air Density Calculator
Calculate dry air density, humid air density, and ISA standard-atmosphere density in one workflow built for meteorology, aerospace, HVAC, wind-energy, and engineering study.
Calculation mode
Active method
Dry air
rho = P / (R_d T)
Use pressure and absolute temperature with the dry-air gas constant.
Result
1.225 kg/m³
Dry air density
Less dense than ISA sea-level dry air
kg/m³
1.225 kg/m³
g/cm³
0.0012 g/cm³
lb/ft³
0.0765 lb/ft³
Sea-level comparison
99.9982% of ISA sea-level density
Dry-air state at 15 °C and 101,325 Pa.
Density vs temperature
Density vs altitude
Density vs relative humidity
Saved history
Save a valid dry, humid, or ISA result to build a reusable local history and export it as CSV or PDF.
Formulas
Air-density relationships used on this page
| Calculation | Formula | Engineering note |
|---|---|---|
| Dry air density | rho = P / (R_d T) | Use absolute pressure in pascals and absolute temperature in kelvin. |
| Humid air density | rho = P_d / (R_d T) + P_v / (R_v T) | Split total pressure into dry-air and water-vapor partial pressures. |
| Relative-humidity route | P_v = phi x P_sat | Relative humidity converts into vapor pressure before density is solved. |
| Magnus saturation pressure | P_sat = 610.78 x e^((17.27 T_c) / (T_c + 237.3)) | Used for RH and dew-point workflows at typical atmospheric temperatures. |
| ISA density by altitude | rho(h) = rho_0 ((T_0 - Lh) / T_0)^((g / (R_d L)) - 1) | Shown in troposphere form here; the calculator uses the layered ISA model up to 86 km. |
The page combines ideal-gas density with moisture corrections and a standard-atmosphere shortcut. Dry mode is the direct gas-law case. Humid mode resolves water vapor before combining dry-air and vapor partial pressures. ISA mode starts from altitude and returns the corresponding standard pressure, temperature, and density state.
If you want the broader background first, review the density formula. If your workflow is mostly about converting between reporting units such as kg/m³ and lb/ft³, the density units guide is the better companion page.
Dry air mode
Use this when you already know temperature and absolute pressure and want the simplest ideal-gas density result. It fits quick physics, classroom, and baseline engineering checks.
Humid air mode
Use this for HVAC, weather, and performance work where water vapor matters. Relative humidity, vapor pressure, dew point, and specific humidity all resolve to the same mixed-gas density workflow.
ISA mode
Use this when altitude is known but local pressure and temperature are not. The calculator applies the layered International Standard Atmosphere profile instead of a single troposphere-only shortcut.
Unit system support
| Category | Supported units | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Temperature input | °C, °F, K | The calculator normalizes to kelvin internally before solving the gas-law terms. |
| Pressure input | Pa, hPa, kPa, atm, mmHg, psi | Useful for meteorology, HVAC, and aviation specs that report pressure differently. |
| Density output | kg/m³, g/cm³, lb/ft³ | Switch output format without changing the underlying state. |
| Altitude input | m, ft, km | ISA mode converts all altitude inputs to meters before applying the atmosphere model. |
| Humidity input | Relative humidity, vapor pressure, dew point, specific humidity | Choose the humidity input that matches your source data instead of converting it elsewhere. |
Standard reference values
| Condition | Density | Note |
|---|---|---|
| 0°C, 1 atm, dry air | 1.292 kg/m³ | Cold sea-level reference often quoted in textbooks. |
| 15°C, 1 atm, dry air | 1.225 kg/m³ | ISA sea-level benchmark used in aviation and atmospheric calculations. |
| 25°C, 1 atm, dry air | 1.184 kg/m³ | Typical warm-room dry-air reference. |
| 30°C, 1 atm, 60% RH | 1.153 kg/m³ | Shows how warm, moist air becomes lighter than dry ISA air. |
ISA quick table
Standard atmosphere reference from sea level to 11 km
| Altitude (m) | Temperature (°C) | Pressure (kPa) | Density (kg/m³) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 15 | 101.325 | 1.225 |
| 1,000 | 8.50 | 89.875 | 1.112 |
| 3,000 | -4.50 | 70.109 | 0.909 |
| 5,000 | -17.50 | 54.02 | 0.736 |
| 1.000e+4 | -50 | 26.437 | 0.413 |
| 1.100e+4 | -56.50 | 22.633 | 0.364 |
Use this table for fast reference, then switch to the calculator if you need humidity correction, alternative output units, saved history, or exportable records.
Use Cases
How engineers and students typically use the tool
Meteorology
Check how density shifts with temperature, humidity, and pressure when you are reviewing station conditions, comparing fronts, or building weather-related coursework examples.
Aerospace
Use ISA mode as a clean baseline for lift, drag, thrust, and engine-intake sensitivity checks. The altitude chart makes density loss with height visible at a glance.
HVAC and ventilation
Humid-air mode helps when airflow, fan sizing, and load assumptions need more than a dry-air shortcut. Output conversion to lb/ft³ also helps when older imperial documentation is involved.
Teaching and study
Students can compare dry versus humid air, export example runs, and save history locally without opening a spreadsheet. Pair it with the gas density calculator when you want the more general ideal-gas form.
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
What is standard air density?
The benchmark most engineers recognize is 1.225 kg/m³. That value corresponds to dry air at International Standard Atmosphere sea-level conditions: 15°C, 101.325 kPa, and no added water vapor.
It is useful as a reference point rather than a universal constant. Real outdoor air changes with local weather, elevation, and moisture content, so a measured or computed state may sit above or below the ISA reference even on the same day.
Why does air density decrease when temperature rises?
In the ideal-gas relationship, density is inversely proportional to absolute temperature when pressure stays fixed. As air warms, molecules move faster and occupy more volume, so fewer kilograms fit into each cubic meter.
That is why the temperature chart on this page slopes downward for the same pressure. It is also why hot-day performance matters in aviation and why HVAC designers do not treat air density as a single fixed number.
Does humidity increase or decrease air density?
Humidity usually decreases air density. The key reason is molecular mass: water vapor is lighter than the average dry-air mixture, so replacing part of the dry-air partial pressure with vapor pressure makes the same cubic meter weigh slightly less.
The effect is often modest compared with pressure and temperature, but it is real and worth including for HVAC, atmospheric, and performance calculations. If your data source gives dew point or relative humidity instead of vapor pressure directly, humid mode handles that conversion for you.
When should I use the ISA mode?
ISA mode is the right choice when you know altitude but do not have measured local pressure and temperature. It gives a consistent baseline atmosphere for classroom work, preliminary aircraft performance estimates, and quick wind-energy comparisons.
On this page, the displayed formula shows the familiar troposphere form, but the calculator itself uses a layered standard-atmosphere model up to 86 km. If you do have actual measured conditions, dry or humid mode is the better representation of the real air state.
What is the difference between dry air and humid air calculations?
Dry-air mode uses the simplest expression on the page: pressure divided by the dry-air gas constant and absolute temperature. It is fast and appropriate whenever moisture effects are negligible or intentionally ignored.
Humid-air mode goes one step further by resolving water vapor explicitly. Total pressure is split into dry-air partial pressure and water-vapor partial pressure, which makes the final density more realistic for weather, indoor-air, and engine-intake scenarios. For the wider background, the density formula page covers the core ratio concept behind all of these variants.
Gas Density Calculator
Use the broader ideal-gas form when you need custom molar mass instead of air-specific constants.
Density Units
Review kg per cubic meter, g per cubic centimeter, and imperial density reporting before exporting results.
Density Formula
Return to the base mass-volume-density idea that sits behind gas, liquid, and material calculators across the site.