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Solar storms destroy ozone layers
A NEW study confirms a long-held theory that large solar storms
rain electrically charged particles down on Earth's atmosphere
and depleted the upper-level ozone for weeks to months
thereafter.
New evidence from NASA and NOAA satellites is helping scientists
better understand how man and nature both play a role in ozone
loss. The study, appearing in the journal Geophysical Research
Letters, examined impacts of a series of huge solar explosions on
the atmosphere in the Northern Hemisphere. A solar flare with an
associated coronal mass ejection sent positively-charged protons
streaming to Earth from July 14 to 16th, 2000.
The bombardment of protons, called a solar proton event, was the
third largest in the last 30 years. Solar storms consist of
coronal mass ejections and solar flares. Coronal mass ejections
are huge bubbles of gas ejected from the Sun and are often
associated with these flares. Solar flares are explosions on the
Sun that happen when energy stored in twisted magnetic fields
(usually above sunspots) is suddenly released.
When protons like these bombard the upper atmosphere, they break
up molecules of gases like nitrogen and water vapour, and once
freed, those atoms react with ozone molecules and reduce the
layer. "A lot of impacts on ozone are very subtle and happen over
long periods of time," said Charles Jackman, a researcher at NASA
Goddard Space Flight Center's Laboratory for Atmospheres and lead
author of the study. "But when these solar proton events occur
you can see immediately a change in the atmosphere, so you have a
clear cause and effect."
The study's investigators used measurements from the Halogen
Occultation Experiment (HALOE) instrument aboard the Upper
Atmosphere Research Satellite (UARS) and the Solar Backscatter
Ultraviolet (SBUV/2) instrument aboard the NOAA-14 satellite to
obtain data on amounts of atmospheric gases like ozone and oxides
of nitrogen in different layers of the atmosphere in the Northern
Hemisphere.
The investigators then compared readings before and during the
event. When the sun's protons hit the atmosphere they break up
molecules of nitrogen gas and water vapor. When nitrogen gas
molecules split apart, they can create molecules, called nitrogen
oxides, which can last several weeks to months depending on where
they end up in the atmosphere.
Once formed, the nitrogen oxides react quickly with ozone and
reduce its amounts. When atmospheric winds blow them down into
the middle stratosphere, they can stay there for months, and
continue to keep ozone at a reduced level. Protons similarly
affect water vapor molecules by breaking them up into forms where
they react with ozone. However, these molecules, called hydrogen
oxides, only last during the time period of the solar proton
event.
These short-term effects of hydrogen oxides can destroy up to 70
per cent of the ozone in the middle mesosphere. At the same time,
longer-term ozone loss caused by nitrogen oxides destroys a
maximum of about nine per cent of the ozone in the upper
stratosphere.
Only a few per cent of total ozone is in the mesosphere and
upper stratosphere with over 80 per cent in the middle and lower
stratosphere. "If you look at the total atmospheric column, from
your head on up to the top of the atmosphere, this solar proton
event depleted less than one per cent of the total ozone in the
Northern Hemisphere," Jackman said. While impacts to humans are
minimal, the findings are important scientifically. "Solar proton
events help us test our models," Jackman said. "This is an
instance where we have a huge natural variance.
You have to first be able to separate the natural effects on
ozone, before you can tease out human- kind's impacts." Chlorine
and bromine are major culprits in ozone decline. Most of the
chlorine and bromine comes from human-produced compounds such as
chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) and halon gas.
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