Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Earth Science News .




OZONE NEWS
NASA Reveals New Results From Inside the Ozone Hole
by Kathryn Hansen for Goddard Space Flight Center
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Dec 16, 2013


The area of the ozone hole, such as in October 2013 (above), is one way to view the ozone hole from year to year. However, the classic metrics have limitations. Image Credit: NASA/Ozone Hole Watch.

NASA scientists have revealed the inner workings of the ozone hole that forms annually over Antarctica and found that declining chlorine in the stratosphere has not yet caused a recovery of the ozone hole.

More than 20 years after the Montreal Protocol agreement limited human emissions of ozone-depleting substances, satellites have monitored the area of the annual ozone hole and watched it essentially stabilize, ceasing to grow substantially larger. However, two new studies show that signs of recovery are not yet present, and that temperature and winds are still driving any annual changes in ozone hole size.

"Ozone holes with smaller areas and a larger total amount of ozone are not necessarily evidence of recovery attributable to the expected chlorine decline," said Susan Strahan of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. "That assumption is like trying to understand what's wrong with your car's engine without lifting the hood."

To find out what's been happening under the ozone hole's hood, Strahan and Natalya Kramarova, also of NASA Goddard, used satellite data to peer inside the hole. The research was presented Wednesday at the annual meeting of the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco.

Kramarova tackled the 2012 ozone hole, the second-smallest hole since the mid 1980s. To find out what caused the hole's diminutive area, she turned to data from the NASA-NOAA Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership satellite, and gained the first look inside the hole with the satellite's Ozone Mapper and Profiler Suite's Limb Profiler.

Next, data were converted into a map that shows how the amount of ozone differed with altitude throughout the stratosphere in the center of the hole during the 2012 season, from September through November.

The map revealed that the 2012 ozone hole was more complex than previously thought. Increases of ozone at upper altitudes in early October, carried there by winds, occurred above the ozone destruction in the lower stratosphere.

"Our work shows that the classic metrics based on the total ozone values have limitations - they don't tell us the whole story," Kramarova said.

The classic metrics create the impression that the ozone hole has improved as a result of the Montreal protocol. In reality, meteorology was responsible for the increased ozone and resulting smaller hole, as ozone-depleting substances that year were still elevated. The study has been submitted to the journal of Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics.

Separate research led by Strahan tackled the holes of 2006 and 2011 - two of the largest and deepest holes in the past decade. Despite their similar area, however, Strahan shows that they became that way for very different reasons.

Strahan used data from the NASA Aura satellite's Microwave Limb Sounder to track the amount of nitrous oxide, a tracer gas inversely related to the amount of ozone depleting chlorine. The researchers were surprised to find that the holes of 2006 and 2011 contained different amounts of ozone-depleting chlorine. Given that fact, how could the two holes be equally severe?

The researchers next used a model to simulate the chemistry and winds of the atmosphere. Then they re-ran the simulation with the ozone-destroying reactions turned off to understand the role that the winds played in bringing ozone to the Antarctic.

Results showed that in 2011, there was less ozone destruction than in 2006 because the winds transported less ozone to the Antarctic - so there was less ozone to lose. This was a meteorological, not chemical effect. In contrast, wind blew more ozone to the Antarctic in 2006 and thus there was more ozone destruction. The research has been submitted to the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

This work shows that the severity of the ozone hole as measured by the classic total column measurements does not reveal the significant year-to-year variations in the two factors that control ozone: the winds that bring ozone to the Antarctic and the chemical loss due to chlorine.

Until chlorine levels in the lower stratosphere decline below the early 1990s level - expected sometime after 2015 but likely by 2030 - temperature and winds will continue to dictate the variable area of the hole in any given year. Not until after the mid 2030s will the decline stratospheric chlorine be the primary factor in the decline of ozone hole area.

"We are still in the period where small changes in chlorine do not affect the area of the ozone hole, which is why it's too soon to say the ozone hole is recovering," Strahan said.

"We're going into a period of large variability and there will be bumps in the road before we can identify a clear recovery."

.


Related Links
Suomi NPP
Ozone at Goddard
All about the Ozone Layer






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
UN sounds alarm over ozone-damaging nitrous oxide
Warsaw (AFP) Nov 21, 2013
Levels of nitrous oxide, a gas that both depletes the ozone layer and stokes global warming, could nearly double by mid-century, the UN warned on Thursday. "We need all hands on deck to combat the serious and significant increases in N2O [nitrous oxide] levels in the atmosphere," UN Environment Programme (UNEP) chief Achim Steiner said in a report coinciding with the world climate talks in W ... read more


OZONE NEWS
Deloitte aids international humanitarian organizations

Desperate Syrians find little comfort in new homes

Japan to spend $970 mn on nuclear soil store: report

Kerry to tour typhoon-hit Philippines, Vietnam

OZONE NEWS
New sensor tracks zinc in cells

Morphing material has mighty potential

Polymers can be semimetals

A Stopwatch for Electron Flashes

OZONE NEWS
Where water is limited, researchers determine how much water is enough

Upper Rio Grande Impact Reveals Growing Gap in Supply and Demand

Harvard study shows sprawl threatens water quality, climate protection, and land conservation gains

Feast and famine on the abyssal plain

OZONE NEWS
Alpine glacier, unchanged for thousands of years, now melting

Arctic cyclones more common than previously thought

NASA-USGS Landsat 8 Satellite Pinpoints Coldest Spots on Earth

'Tiger stripes' underneath Antarctic glaciers slow the flow

OZONE NEWS
Scientists help adapt Brazil farming to climate change

Toxic Substances in Banana Plants Kill Root Pests

Biodegradable or not?

New System for Assessing How Effective Species Are at Pollinating Crops

OZONE NEWS
Post-Sandy, Long Island barrier systems appear surprisingly sound

Sicily airport stays shut due to volcano eruption

Runaway process drives intermediate-depth earthquakes

Volcanic eruption shuts Italy airport

OZONE NEWS
Six dead in Brazzaville army shootout

France warns of rising sectarian unrest in C. Africa

DR Congo, M23 rebels sign peace documents

Trinidad security industry faces calls for clean-up

OZONE NEWS
Evolution of 'third party punishment'

Simple mathematical formula describes human struggles

Discovery of 1.4 million-year-old fossil human hand bone closes human evolution gap

Study: Young people in Canada prefer urban cores to suburban living




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. 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