Antarctic Ozone hole is healing

Antarctic Ozone hole is healing
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A research team of the Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur has come up with new data confirming that the Antarctic Ozone hole is on a healing path, a statement issued by the institute said Friday Researchers of the Center of Oceans, Rivers,

Kolkata: A research team of the Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur has come up with new data "confirming" that the Antarctic Ozone hole is on a "healing" path, a statement issued by the institute said Friday. Researchers of the Center of Oceans, Rivers, Atmosphere and Law Science (CORAL) of IIT Kharagpur have collected data from 1979 to 2017, which shows though there was a loss in saturation of Ozone since 1987 over the Antarctic, the saturation of loss at 12-21 km stretch has significantly reduced over the period 20012017, the statement said. While the world is debating on climate change and global warming, the findings by CORAL researchers have given environmentalists a reason to rejoice, it said.

This is the first of its kind research providing detailed long-term (over four decades) analysis of Antarctic ozone loss saturation in terms of its occurrence, timing using high-resolution ozonesondes (a ballon borne instrument that measures concentration of ozone) and satellite measurements inside the vortex (a whirling mass of fluid or air) for the said period, the statement said. "We have observed over the past four decades the Ozone layer depletion peaked during winters each year except the warm winters of 1988 and 2002. However, our analysis shows a clear reduction in the frequency of occurrence of ozone loss saturation over the period 20012017 consistently throughout various datasets," Prof Jayanarayanan Kuttippurath said.

"This reveals the emergence of an important milestone in ozone recovery," he said. Kuttippurath along with Pankaj Kumar, Prijitha J Nair and P C Pandey from the IIT Kharagpur Coral team conducted the study. Data were collected for various altitudes from autumn to spring, over the decades, from stations across Antarctica, including measurements from the Indian station Maitri.

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