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Assessing Stratospheric Ozone


Article # : 13471 

Section : NATURAL SCIENCE
Issue Date : 9 / 1987  2,412 Words
Author : S. Fred Singer
S. Fred Singer, Visiting Eminent Scholar at George Mason University and former director of the U.S. Weather Satellite Program, is a pioneer in unmanned space science. His early work included study of primary cosmic radiation and the discovery of the equatorial "elctrojet" current in the Earth's ionosphere. He also proposed to NASA the manned mission to Phobos and Deimos now referred to as the Ph-D Project.

       The discovery in 1985 of a "hole" in the atmospheric ozone layer near the South Pole has focused worldwide interest on what is happening to ozone, a small yet vitally important constituent of the earth's atmosphere. It has also raised concern about possible health effects, particularly an increase in the skin cancer rate.
       
        A question dating back to the 1970 controversy about the effects of supersonic transport aircraft has resurfaced: To what extent are human activities producing ozone changes? Over the last fifteen years, the focus of investigation has shifted from one probable cause to another. Today, the emission of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) into the atmosphere has raised fears of their effect on the ozone layer and has led to demands that the production of these extremely useful chemicals be curtailed or even abolished.
       
        Of course, the "hole" isn't really a hole at all, but a temporary thinning in the ozone layer between 10 and 25 kilometers above sea level. This phenomenon takes place for a few weeks each year, around October, in the region of the Antarctic. Research so far has discovered no long-term changes in ozone elsewhere, although the evidence is not conclusive.
       
        The ozone hole was discovered by scientists of the British Antarctic Survey operating an observation station on the Antarctic continent. After they reported their findings in 1985, NASA scientists searching their records of satellite data confirmed the effect. Indeed, the hole has been around since the mid-1970s, and getting larger every year, reaching a depletion of about 50 percent. Concern has centered both on the extent of the hole and on our inability to ... (1998 of 14853 Characters)
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