No, they are not. CFC's destroy the ozone layer.
Chemicals are many dangerous to ozone. CFC's and FREONS top the list.
Many countries are destroying the ozone. The developed nations are on top.
A cardboard model in the form of cylinder can be made. The top circle being the ozone layer and the bottom being the land. You can show all phenomenon in the middle.
In the stratosphere, the temperature increases with height. This is due to the presence of the ozone layer near the top of the stratosphere. The ozone layer absorbs incoming UV radiation, and thus the temperatures are warmer at the top of the stratosphere than at the bottom.
Ozone is broken down fairly quickly by water vapor. Ozone (or at least lone oxygen atoms) will oxidize solar wind constituents to form hydroxyl ions and eventually water vapor. Otherwise, no, the top of the troposphere is cold enough that water vapor freezes and falls back down, so that an ozone layer can form (and stay at higher concentrations).
That would be the 2nd layer, the stratosphere layer with the ozone at top.
The ozone layer is located in the top layer of the stratosphere
It is on the bottom. It is pool of ozone molecules.
Chemicals are many dangerous to ozone. CFC's and FREONS top the list.
Many countries are destroying the ozone. The developed nations are on top.
The "ozone" layer at the top of the atmosphere.
A cardboard model in the form of cylinder can be made. The top circle being the ozone layer and the bottom being the land. You can show all phenomenon in the middle.
Various culprits are there. CFC's are on the top.
In the stratosphere, the temperature increases with height. This is due to the presence of the ozone layer near the top of the stratosphere. The ozone layer absorbs incoming UV radiation, and thus the temperatures are warmer at the top of the stratosphere than at the bottom.
In the stratosphere, the temperature increases with height. This is due to the presence of the ozone layer near the top of the stratosphere. The ozone layer absorbs incoming UV radiation, and thus the temperatures are warmer at the top of the stratosphere than at the bottom.
In the stratosphere, the temperature increases with height. This is due to the presence of the ozone layer near the top of the stratosphere. The ozone layer absorbs incoming UV radiation, and thus the temperatures are warmer at the top of the stratosphere than at the bottom.
The temperature in the stratosphere increases with altitude because the ozone lies in the stratosphere. The ozone layer absorbs harmful ultraviolet rays from the sun. Higher in the stratosphere the ozone is thicker and absorbes more radiation, which makes it warmer.