The Antarctic ozone hole, which yawns wide every Southern Hemisphere  spring, reached its annual peak on September 12, stretching 10.05  million square miles, the ninth largest on record. Above the South Pole,  the ozone hole reached its deepest point of the season on October 9  when total ozone readings dropped to 102 Dobson units, tied for the 10th  lowest in the 26-year record.
The ozone layer helps protect the planet's surface from harmful  ultraviolet radiation. NOAA and NASA use balloon-borne instruments,  ground instruments, and satellites to monitor the annual South Pole  ozone hole, global levels of ozone in the stratosphere, and the  humanmade chemicals that contribute to ozone depletion.
"The upper part of the atmosphere over the South Pole was colder than  average this season and that cold air is one of the key ingredients for  ozone destruction," said James Butler, director of NOAA's Global  Monitoring Division in Boulder, Colo. Other key ingredients are  ozone-depleting chemicals that remain in the atmosphere and ice crystals  on which ozone-depleting chemical reactions take place.
"Even though it was relatively large, the size of this year's ozone  hole was within the range we'd expect given the levels of manmade,  ozone-depleting chemicals that continue to persist," said Paul Newman,  chief atmospheric scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center.
Levels of most ozone-depleting chemicals are slowly declining due to  international action, but many have long lifetimes, remaining in the  atmosphere for decades. Scientists around the world are looking for  evidence that the ozone layer is beginning to heal, but this year's data  from Antarctica do not hint at a turnaround.
In August and September (spring in Antarctica), the sun begins rising  again after several months of darkness. Circumpolar winds keep cold air  trapped above the continent, and sunlight-sparked reactions involving  ice clouds and humanmade chemicals begin eating away at the ozone. Most  years, the conditions for ozone depletion ease by early December, and  the seasonal hole closes.
Levels of most ozone-depleting chemicals in the atmosphere have been  gradually declining since an international treaty to protect the ozone  layer, the 1987 Montreal Protocol, was signed. That international treaty  caused the phase out of ozone-depleting chemicals, then used widely in  refrigeration, as solvents and in aerosol spray cans.
Environment-Clean-Generations
Global atmospheric models predict that stratospheric ozone could  recover by the middle of this century, but the ozone hole in the  Antarctic will likely persist one to two decades beyond that, according  to the latest analysis by the World Meteorological Organization, the 2010 Ozone Assessment, with co-authors from NOAA and NASA.
Researchers do not expect a smooth, steady recovery of Antarctic  ozone, because of natural ups and downs in temperatures and other  factors that affect depletion, noted NOAA ESRL scientist Bryan Johnson.  Johnson helped co-author a recent NOAA paper that concluded it could  take another decade to begin discerning changes in the rates of ozone  depletion.
Johnson is part of the NOAA team tracks ozone depletion around the  globe and at the South Pole with measurements made from the ground, in  the atmosphere itself and by satellite. Johnson's "ozonesonde" group has  been using balloons to loft instruments 18 miles into the atmosphere  for 26 years to collect detailed profiles of ozone levels from the  surface up. The team also measures ozone with satellite and ground-based  instruments.
This November marks the 50th anniversary of the start of total ozone  column measurements by the NOAA Dobson spectrophotometer instrument at  South Pole station. Ground-based ozone column measurements started  nearly two decades before the yearly Antarctic ozone hole began forming,  therefore helping researchers to recognize this unusual change of the  ozone layer.
NASA measures ozone in the stratosphere with the Ozone Monitoring  Instrument (OMI) aboard the Aura satellite. OMI continues a NASA legacy  of monitoring the ozone layer from space that dates back to 1972 and the  launch of the Nimbus-4 satellite.
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