The record-breaking ozone layer hole in the Arctic finally healed according to scientific reports. This great news was shared by Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS) through a twitter post last week.
CAMS is an organization implemented by the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts on behalf of the European Commission.
The hole was formed late in March and this has a measure of 1 Million Square Kilometer.
Here’s the monitoring of the unusual ozone hole that was formed over the Arctic from CAMS.
Science News explained in a blog post, “A powerful polar vortex has trapped especially frigid air in the atmosphere above the North Pole, allowing high-altitude clouds to form in the stratosphere, where the ozone layer also sits. Within those clouds, chlorofluorocarbons and hydrochlorofluorocarbons already high in the atmosphere — gases used as refrigerants — react with ultraviolet rays from the sun to release chlorine and bromine atoms, which in turn react with and deplete the ozone.”
CAMS clarified in a tweet that the pandemic-related and lockdown measures throughout the globe have nothing to do with the healing of the hole. CAMS said that the closing of the large hole in the ozone layer was driven by an unusually strong and long-lived polar vortex.
Here’s the forecast provided by CAMS to monitor the ozone layer.
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