lower than that of the atmosphere, referring, for example, to temperature
subatmospheric in American English
(ˌsʌbætməsˈferɪk, -ˈfɪər-)
adjective
(of a quantity)
having a value lower than that of the atmosphere
subatmospheric temperatures
Word origin
[1940–45; sub- + atmospheric]This word is first recorded in the period 1940–45. Other words that entered Englishat around the same time include: debrief, redline, set-aside, snorkel, updatesub- is a prefix occurring originally in loanwords from Latin (subject; subtract; subvert; subsidy). On this model, sub- is freely attached to elements of any origin and used with the meaning “under,” “below,”“beneath” (subalpine; substratum), “slightly,” “imperfectly,” “nearly” (subcolumnar; subtropical), “secondary,” “subordinate” (subcommittee; subplot)