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EARTH OBSERVATION
NASA, NOAA scientists: Earth's ozone hole slightly smaller
by Doug Cunningham
Washington DC (UPI) Oct 26, 2021

The Earth's ozone layer hole over Antarctica is slightly smaller in 2022, according to NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Ozone protects Earth from ultraviolet rays from the sun.

The ozone hole covers an average area of 8.91 million square miles compared with an average of 8.99 million square miles last year.

That's well below the 2006 peak size of the ozone hole, according to NOAA.

"Over time, steady progress is being made and the hole is getting smaller," said Paul Newman, chief scientist for Earth Sciences at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, in a statement.

"We see some wavering as weather changes and other factors make the numbers wiggle slightly from day to day and week to week. But overall, we see it decreasing through the last two decades. Eliminating ozone-depleting substances through the Montreal Protocol is shrinking the hole."

The ozone hole happens every September above the South Pole.

According to NOAA, chlorine and bromine derived from human-produced compounds are released through chemical reactions in high-altitude polar clouds. Those reactions deplete the ozone layer, with the strongest depletion over Antarctica.

Measurements in recent years show the ozone hole smaller in recent years than it was during the late 1990s and early 2000s, according to NASA and NOAA scientists.

NASA and NOAA use instruments aboard the Aura, Suomi NPP and NOAA-20 satellites to measure the growth and breakup of the ozone hole.

Despite the average size of the ozone hole becoming slightly smaller, the satellites detected a single-day maximum ozone hole of 10.2 million square miles -- slightly larger than last year.

NOAA scientists also use a Dobson Spectrophotometer to take ozone hole measurements. That's an optical instrument that records the total amount of ozone between the Earth's surface and the edge of space -- known as the total column ozone value.

A study of the ozone hole in 2018 by the United Nations and World Meteorological Organization said scientists expect the northern atmosphere's ozone hole to recover completely by 2030.


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EARTH OBSERVATION
International collaboration uses auroras to reveal a new factor that damages the ozone layer
Nagoya, Japan (SPX) Oct 17, 2022
To assess damage caused to the ozone layer by charged particles in space that surround the Earth, an international team of researchers from Japan, the United States, and Canada studied a type of aurora called an "isolated proton aurora". They found more damage than predicted by simulations, suggesting a new factor to consider when assessing damage to the ozone layer. Along with solar radiation from the Sun, cosmic rays and high-energy plasma particles, such as ions and electrons, bombard the Earth ... read more

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