October 19, 2006
NASA AND NOAA ANNOUNCE OZONE HOLE IS A
DOUBLE RECORD BREAKER
NASA and National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
scientists report this year's ozone hole in the polar region of the
Southern
Hemisphere has broken records for area and depth.
The ozone layer acts to protect life on Earth by blocking harmful
ultraviolet
rays from the sun. The "ozone hole" is a severe depletion of the
ozone layer high above
"From September
21 to 30, the average area of the ozone hole
was the largest ever observed, at 10.6 million square miles," said Paul
Newman, atmospheric scientist at NASA's
The Ozone Monitoring Instrument on NASA's Aura satellite measures the
total
amount of ozone from the ground to the upper atmosphere over the entire
Antarctic continent. This instrument observed a low value of 85 Dobson
Units
(DU) on Oct. 8, in a region over the East Antarctic ice sheet. Dobson
Units are
a measure of ozone amounts above a fixed point in the atmosphere. The
Ozone
Monitoring Instrument was developed by the
Scientists from NOAA's Earth System Research Laboratory in
"These numbers mean the ozone is virtually gone in this layer of the
atmosphere," said David Hofmann, director of the Global Monitoring
Division at the NOAA Earth System Research Laboratory. "The depleted
layer
has an unusual vertical extent this year, so it appears that the 2006
ozone
hole will go down as a record-setter."
Observations by Aura's Microwave Limb Sounder show extremely high
levels of
ozone destroying chlorine chemicals in the lower stratosphere
(approximately
12.4 miles high). These high chlorine values covered the entire
Antarctic
region in mid to late September. The high chlorine levels were
accompanied by
extremely low values of ozone.
The temperature
of the Antarctic stratosphere causes the severity
of the ozone hole to vary from year to year. Colder than average
temperatures
result in larger and deeper ozone holes, while warmer temperatures lead
to
smaller ones. The NOAA National Centers for Environmental Prediction
(NCEP)
provided analyses of satellite and balloon stratospheric temperature
observations. The temperature readings from NOAA satellites and
balloons during
late-September 2006 showed the lower stratosphere at the rim of
Antarctica was
approximately nine degrees Fahrenheit colder than average, increasing
the size
of this year's ozone hole by 1.2 to 1.5 million square miles.
The Antarctic stratosphere warms by the return of sunlight at the end
of the polar
winter and by large-scale weather systems (planetary-scale waves) that
form in
the troposphere and move upward into the stratosphere. During the 2006
Antarctic winter and spring, these planetary-scale wave systems were
relatively
weak, causing the stratosphere to be colder than average.
As a result of the Montreal Protocol and its amendments, the
concentrations of
ozone-depleting substances in the lower atmosphere (troposphere) peaked
around
1995 and are decreasing in both the troposphere and stratosphere. It is
estimated these gases reached peak levels in the
As a result of this slow decline, the ozone hole is estimated to
annually very
slowly decrease in area by about 0.1 to 0.2 percent for the next five
to 10
years. This slow decrease is masked by large year-to-year variations
caused by
Antarctic stratosphere weather fluctuations.
The recently completed 2006 World Meteorological Organization/United
Nations
Environment Programme Scientific Assessment of Ozone Depletion
concluded the
ozone hole recovery would be masked by annual variability for the near
future
and the ozone hole would fully recover in approximately 2065.
"We now have the largest ozone hole on record for this time of year," says Craig Long of NOAA’s NCEP. As the sun rises higher in the sky during October and November, this unusually large and persistent area may allow much more ultraviolet light than usual to reach Earth's surface in the southern latitudes.
For more information and
images, visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/lookingatearth/ozone_record.html
##
Contact:
Rob Gutro
301-286-4044
robert.j.gutro@nasa.gov
This
text is derived from:
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/lookingatearth/ozone_record.html