. Space Industry and Business News .




.
OZONE NEWS
Ozone Depletion a Bigger Deal Down Under
by Christina Coleman for Goddard Space Flight Center
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Oct 24, 2011

File image

The Earth's thinning ozone layer is synonymous with a singing and dancing seagull named Sid - at least it is in New Zealand and Australia.

"This time of year there is a huge push to 'Slip, Slop, Slap,'" says Hamish Talbot, a native New Zealander. These publicly funded commercials implore people to "slip" on a t-shirt, "slop" on some sunscreen and "slap" on a hat.

All this protection is necessary because New Zealand's location in the Southern Hemisphere puts it very close to the "ozone hole" that forms over the South Pole at this time every year. The ozone is so thin in this part of the world that the weather report on the nightly news includes five-minute sunburn alerts.

Ozone is Earth's natural sunscreen. The ozone layer in the upper atmosphere, or stratosphere, absorbs harmful ultraviolet rays from the sun. In the 1980s, scientists discovered that manmade chemicals destroy ozone to the point where an actual ozone hole occurs.

The good news is that this hole isn't getting any larger.

"In fact, we have definitive evidence to show that these manmade chemicals are decreasing," says Paul Newman, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center's chief atmospheric scientist.

These chemicals, chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), peaked in the year 2000 and began coming down due to actions taken to save the protective ozone layer beginning in the1980s. That's when nearly 200 nations agreed to the Montreal Protocol, which strongly regulates ozone-depleting chemicals.

Scientists believe that about 80 percent of the chlorine molecules in the stratosphere are due to human-produced chemicals. Halogens such as chlorine and bromine, which are mainly responsible for chemical ozone depletion, come from chlorine-containing CFCs, which were commonly used as aerosols and in refrigerators, and bromine-containing halons, which were used in fire suppression, among other uses.

Originally thought to be harmless, scientists discovered that these chemicals travel into Earth's stratosphere. Once there, ultraviolet radiation splits the CFCs or halons apart, and the chlorine and bromine containing molecules can then react with ozone, ultimately tearing away at the ozone layer.

Even though CFCs are now regulated, Newman cautions that they have a long lifetime.

"In 2100, CFCs will still be 20 percent more abundant in the atmosphere than they were in 1950. So while it's not getting any worse, it won't get better fast."

A complication to this chemistry is cold temperatures.

"Surface temperature doesn't affect ozone, but it is extraordinarily cold about 70,000 feet above Antarctica," Newman says.

At that altitude, clouds form in the polar regions that enable a chemistry to occur that doesn't happen anywhere else. "These clouds are made up of water, nitric acid and sulfuric acid," Newman says.

These clouds kick start the process by releasing chlorine from a chemically inactive form into a form that can catalytically destroy ozone. With a little bit of sunlight to energize the reactions, a chlorine atom can destroy thousands of ozone molecules.

"So you need CFCs for the chlorine, really cold temperatures for the clouds, and a little bit of sun. That's the recipe for the ozone hole," Newman says.

While it is very hard to predict year-to-year stratospheric temperatures, scientists have been able to measure the success of ozone protection efforts for more than 40 years using NASA satellites. Data records began with the NASA Backscatter UltraViolet (BUV) Instrument on Nimbus-4 in 1970.

By 1979, scientists were able to measure the size of the ozone hole using NASA's Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (TOMS). The record continued with the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI), supplied by the Netherlands and Finland on the NASA Earth Observing System satellite Aura.

"At first scientists made predictions that chlorine was destroying the ozone, and we indeed found that it was happening," Newman says. "Now the challenge is to confirm that our predictions of ozone recovery are playing out as we said they would."

Researchers will continue to collect ozone data with the launch of the NPOESS Preparatory Project (NPP), scheduled for Oct. 28. Aboard NPP is the Ozone Mapping and Profiler Suite (OMPS), a new design consisting of two ozone-measuring instruments.

The 'limb profiler' views the edge of the atmosphere from an angle to help scientists observe ozone at various levels above the Earth's surface, including the protective ozone layer in the stratosphere. The other instrument is "nadir-viewing," meaning it looks down from the satellite, measuring the total amount of ozone between the ground and the atmosphere.

NASA satellite data and models predict that the ozone hole will not return to pre-1980 levels for decades. In the meantime, Newman says OMPS will continue the data record into the future - and additional ozone-monitoring instruments are already planned for after NPP.

"We need to really care about the ozone because it is our natural sunscreen. UV radiation can lead to skin cancer, cause cataracts, suppreses the immune system, impact crops, and contribute to degradation of materials," says Newman.

While OMPS and other instruments will continue to monitor the health of our ozone layer, the fact that it will take a long time for our atmosphere to recover from the damage caused by CFCs, means that Sid the Seagull will keep on singing "Slip, Slop, Slap" - warning people to spend less time outside and more time under a floppy hat.

Related Links
Ozone Watch at NASA
All about the Ozone Layer




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries






.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



OZONE NEWS
Scientists worried as Arctic has record ozone loss
Paris (AFP) Oct 2, 2011
An ozone hole five times the size of California opened over the Arctic this spring, matching ozone loss over Antarctica for the first time on record, scientists said on Sunday. Formed by a deep chill over the North Pole, the unprecedented hole at one point shifted over eastern Europe, Russia and Mongolia, exposing populations to higher, but unsustained, levels of ultra-violet light. Ozon ... read more


OZONE NEWS
Space Waste Transporter: Going Where No Garbage Man has Gone Before

ROSAT re-entered atmosphere over Bay of Bengal

German satellite re-enters Earth's atmosphere

Proposal would 'recycle' satellite parts

OZONE NEWS
Emirates seek French military satellite

First MEADS Battle Manager Begins Integration Testing in the United States

Elbit Establishes Israeli MOD Comms Equipment Supply Upgrade and Maintenance Project

Boeing FAB-T Demonstrates High-Data-Rate Communications with AEHF Satellite Test Terminal

OZONE NEWS
Weather Favorable for NPP Launch

Vega arrives at French Guiana in preparation for its January 26 inaugural launch

SpaceX Completes Key Milestone to Fly Astronauts to International Space Station

ILS Proton Launches ViaSat-1 for ViaSat

OZONE NEWS
One Soyuz launcher, two Galileo satellites, three successes for Europe

Russia to launch four Glonass satellites in November

Soyuz places Galileo satellites in orbit - mission control

GPS shoes for Alzheimer's patients to hit US

OZONE NEWS
US House targets EU airlines emissions rule

Boeing Dreamliner to make first commercial flight

EU rebukes US Congress over airline emissions rules

China's aviation sector sees slower growth: report

OZONE NEWS
NIST measures key property of potential spintronic material

Superlattice Cameras Add More 'Color' to Night Vision

A new scheme for photonic quantum computing

Point defects in super-chilled diamonds may offer stable candidates for quantum computing bits

OZONE NEWS
Lockheed Martin Begins GeoEye-2 Satellite Integration

Better use of Global Geospatial Information for Solving Development Challenges

NASA postpones climate satellite launch to Oct 28

NASA Readies New Type of Earth-Observing Satellite for Launch

OZONE NEWS
Fresh oil pollution reported in Nigerian region

'Historic' deal to halt hazardous waste export to south

Home washing machines: Source of potentially harmful ocean 'microplastic' pollution

Pollutants linked to a 450 percent increase in risk of birth defects


.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement