Warm air caused ozone hole to shrink to its smallest size since 1988: Scientists
An unstable and warmer Antarctic vortex – the stratospheric low pressure system that rotates clockwise in the atmosphere above Antarctica – strongly influenced the smaller ozone hole in 2017.
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New Delhi: Scientists from NASA and the National Oceanic and Atomospheric Administration (NOAA) have noted that a hole in the Earth's ozone layer that forms over Antarctica each September due to warm air was the smallest this year since 1988.
On September 11, the ozone hole reached its peak extent, covering an area about 7.6 million square miles – approximately two and a half times the size of the US – and then declined through the remainder of September and into October, NASA said.
The NOAA's ground-and balloon-based measurements also showed the least amount of ozone depletion above the continent during the peak of the ozone depletion cycle since 1988.
"The Antarctic ozone hole was exceptionally weak this year," Paul A Newman, chief scientist for Earth Sciences at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Centre in Greenbelt, Maryland, said in a statement.
"This is what we would expect to see given the weather conditions in the Antarctic stratosphere," Newman added.
An unstable and warmer Antarctic vortex – the stratospheric low pressure system that rotates clockwise in the atmosphere above Antarctica – strongly influenced the smaller ozone hole in 2017.
(Video courtesy: NASA Goddard)
In 2016, the ozone hole reached a maximum 8.9 million square miles, 2 million square miles less than in 2015.
The average area of these daily ozone hole maximums observed since 1991 has been roughly 10 million square miles.
Scientists said the smaller ozone hole extent in 2016 and 2017 is due to natural variability and not a signal of rapid healing.
The Antarctic ozone hole was first detected in 1985. It forms during the Southern Hemisphere's late winter as the returning sun's rays catalyse reactions involving man-made, chemically active forms of chlorine and bromine. These reactions destroy ozone molecules.
In the stratosphere, roughly seven to 25 miles above Earth's surface, the ozone layer acts like sunscreen, shielding the planet from potentially harmful ultraviolet radiation that can cause skin cancer and cataracts, suppress immune systems and also damage plants.
(With IANS inputs)
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