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Courtesy of the Centre for Atmospheric Sciences, Cambridge University and www.solcomhouse.com plus Claire Cosgrove and Peter Webster (EAS) with liberal use of Rich Turcos Earth Under Siege
Dramatic loss of ozone in the lower stratosphere over Antarctica was first noticed in the 1970s by a research group from the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) who were monitoring the atmosphere above Antarctica
News media confuses it with the problem of global warming ozone contributes to the greenhouse effect over Antarctica (and the Arctic), stratospheric ozone depleted over past 15 years at certain times of the year hole presently size Antarctica, 10km altitude - lower stratosphere
What is ozone?
Ozone forms a layer in the stratosphere, thinnest in the tropics (around the equator) and denser towards the poles measured in Dobson units (DU) ~260 DU near the tropics
1 Dobson Unit (DU) is defined to be 0.01 mm thickness at STP - (0C and 1 atmos press). A slab 3mm thick corresponds to 300 DU
Climatology of ozone
Annual cycle
Mean climatology
How ironic . . .
at ground level, ozone is a health hazard major constituent of photochemical smog in the stratosphere, it absorbs potentially harmful ultra-violet (UV 240-320nm harmful) radiation Protects from skin cancer, etc
Chapman Reactions
Ozone can reform resulting in no net loss of ozone: O3 + hv -> O2 + O (3) O + O2 -> O3 (2)
Comparison of reactions
Reaction (2) slower with increasing altitude Reaction (3) faster with increasing altitude Lower in stratosphere, atmosphere denser, UV absorption increases ozone peaks 20km Closer to surface, UV level decr, ozone decr
Chlorine, bromine from human activities Chlorine carriers hydrochloric acid, chlorine nitrate Other impt cpds nitric acid, dinitrogen pentoxide Right conditions necessary for chemical reactions to occur On surface of PSC Denoxification slows removal ClO
We still have many more atoms ozone than active chlorine How do we destroy all the ozone??
Only have molecular chlorine (Cl2) Require atomic chlorine to destroy ozone
Via photodissociation
Cl2 + hv -> Cl + Cl Key to timing of ozone hole Finally catalytic destruction of ozone
Final stage
Catalytic cycle molecules significantly changes or enables a reaction cycle without being altered by the cycle itself
Polar winter polar vortex isolates air within Cold temperatures Polar Stratospheric Clouds vortex air isolated cold temperatures & PSCs persist Heterogeneous reactions allow reservoir species of chlorine & bromine - rapidly converted to more active forms. No ozone loss until sunlight returns production active chlorine initiates catalytic ozone destruction ozone loss rapid
most dramatic in the lower stratosphere nearly all the ozone depleted area the size of Antarctica many km thick most pronounced in spring/October persists two months December moves Falklands, S Georgia, S Am
http://www.atm.ch.cam.ac.uk/tour/tour_mpeg/a Winter no light ClONO2 destroyed sunlight returns ClONO2 recovery edge vortex doughnut shape chlorine nitrate collar
release of manmade chemicals CFC - refrigerants, aerosol sprays, solvents and foamblowing agents
halogen compounds - Fire fighters used brominecontaining halogens to put out fires
NOx
One chlorine atom - average - destroys one thousand ozone molecules before converted into form harmless to ozone
Reservoirs
Reactions
Sources of chloroflurocarbons
Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer Based on backscattered light UV range Dobson units (DU)
1.5 x USA Australia 8,923,000 USA 9,363,130 Europe 10,498,000 Antarctica 13,340,000 Russia 17,078,000 N America 25,349,000 Africa 30,355,000 sq km
First global agreement - restrict CFCs Montreal Protocol - 1987 European Community countries have even stricter measures Was anticipated - recovery of the ozone layer within 50 years of 2000 World
Meteorological Organisation (WMO reports #25, #37)
Arctic low ozone event S America from Antarctica hole Volcanic ozone hole European ozone hole - heavily populated northern mid-latitudes (30-60N) formation smaller, much slower
Polar meteorology Polar vortex winter polar night Polar stratospheric clouds (-80C) nitric acid trihydrate Chemical reactions
Vortex explanation
mid-May - onset SH winter Antarctic stratosphere cools descends closer to the surface Coriolis effect - sets up strong westerly circulation (@ SP) forms oblong vortex temperatures - lower stratosphere cool < -80C PCSs
The Ozone hole has reached Argentina, Chile and The Falkland Islands since the 1990's. Ozone levels dropped down 70% in some areas. The protective level of ozone dropped below 150 DU in some areas.
Could be blown south by high-altitude winds across heavily populated regions 10% reduction ozone layer 25% imcr non-melanoma skin cancer temperate climates by 2050 Arctic ozone recovery may not be as quick as Antarctic
Polar stratospheric clouds surfaces where benign forms of chlorine reactive ozonedestroying forms Remove nitrogen compounds that moderate destructive impact of chlorine - Dr. Phil De Cola,
Atmospheric Chemistry Program Manager, NASA Headquarters, Washington, DC.
Presently nitric acid stays longer in Arctic reduces amount reactive chlorine
Arctic ozone hole forming within 20y Professor Jonathan Shanklin,The British Antarctic Study
What causes these losses? Are losses over poles linked with those of mid latitudes? Are CFCs and bromine also responsible?
European Ozone
Upper atmospheric conditions in The Northern Hemisphere are becoming similar to those of the Antarctic. The result of this could be the formation of an "Arctic Ozone Hole" or more correctly termed "low ozone event". 10% ozone decr winter 5% ozone decr - summer
November 11,2001
Levels of ozone - fall to 60-70% of the seasonal average -Climate Research Centre, KNMI, The Netherlands.
Low ozone event maybe caused by unusual air currents not chemicals as Antarctic ozone hole
An "ozone hole" could form over the North Pole after future major volcanic eruptions within next 30 years - Azadeh Tabazadeh, scientist at NASA's Ames Research
Center, Moffett Field, Calif
winter stratosphere temperatures highly variable in Arctic If a period of high volcanic activity coincides with a series of cold Arctic winters
Large volcanic eruptions - pump sulfur compounds into atmosphere. Compounds form sulfuric acid clouds - similar polar stratospheric clouds - nitric acid and water. Form in upper atmosphere - very cold conditions destruction of ozone over poles. Volcanic sulfuric acid clouds add to the ozonedestroying power of polar stratospheric clouds
Global implications
Could volcanic aerosols cause ozone destruction in warmer regions of the globe? Could ozone destruction occur at lower altitude corresponding with level of volcanic aerosol? YES 1993 Artic winter not extremely cold but ozone loss was very high why? sulphurous Pintatubo clouds at lower altitude
Chemical modelling
'blow' (or advect) chemical species around the globe using known or computed weather patterns - winds, temperatures and pressures rates of chemical reactions dependent on temperature, pressure, and with photolytic processes, the position of the sun
Box model single point only chemistry simulated cheap model Trajectory model trajectory box model that moves wind fields path 3-D model grid of box models with vertical levels- more realistic meteorology - complex
Health Consequences
Skin cancers, sunburn, eye damage, cataracts estimated 10 % reduction ozone layer 25 % increase non-melanoma skin cancer -temperate latitudes by 2050 Suppress immune system DNA mutation of existing disease bacteria and viruses
herpes viruses human immunodeficiency virus HIV- 1 variety of papilloma viruses leishmaniasis malaria forms of tuberculosis leprosy lupus erthematodes dermatitis E. coli Staphylococcus aureus
Biological Consequences
Biologically damaging young, new shoots Southern Ocean - most productive marine ecosystem - less phytoplankton (8.5per cent decr)- food for microscopic animals - eaten by krill sustain seals, penguins, and baleen whales 6 % ozone depletion loss 7 million tons fish per year
And . .
damages DNA marine bacteria, starfish and urchins larvae alters ocean chemistry
http://www.theozonehole.com/ozonehole2003.htm