4.8 Article

Unprecedented Arctic ozone loss in 2011

Journal

NATURE
Volume 478, Issue 7370, Pages 469-U65

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature10556

Keywords

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Funding

  1. OMI
  2. CALIPSO
  3. Match science teams
  4. Aura project
  5. Environment Canada
  6. Canadian Space Agency
  7. Academy of Finland
  8. EC DG Research
  9. NASA
  10. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [20244077] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Chemical ozone destruction occurs over both polar regions in local winter-spring. In the Antarctic, essentially complete removal of lower-stratospheric ozone currently results in an ozone hole every year, whereas in the Arctic, ozone loss is highly variable and has until now been much more limited. Here we demonstrate that chemical ozone destruction over the Arctic in early 2011 was-for the first time in the observational record-comparable to that in the Antarctic ozone hole. Unusually long-lasting cold conditions in the Arctic lower stratosphere led to persistent enhancement in ozone-destroying forms of chlorine and to unprecedented ozone loss, which exceeded 80 per cent over 18-20 kilometres altitude. Our results show that Arctic ozone holes are possible even with temperatures much milder than those in the Antarctic. We cannot at present predict when such severe Arctic ozone depletion may be matched or exceeded.

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