Cfc's rise to the stratosphere and react with ozone. These CFC's release chlorine which reacts with ozone to deplete it and form oxygen molecule and nascent oxygen.
Yes, CFC's destroy the ozone in the stratosphere. They react with ozone to destroy it.
It begins to get warmer from the sun's radiation.
The temperature does not fall in the stratosphere. The temperature rises considerably once you reach this part of the atmosphere. This is because this is where most of the sun's rays are collected before hitting the surface of the earth.
Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)
The chemicals that are believed to have caused ozone depletion are CFC's.They react with ozone present in the stratosphere and deplete it.
Chlorofluorocarbons, also called CFC, go into the stratosphere. Air is lighter than the CFC and they can take about 2 to 5 years to travel in the stratosphere.
Yes, CFC's destroy the ozone in the stratosphere. They react with ozone to destroy it.
Yes, do destroy it. They destroy the ozone within.
Hours or days. Updrafts carry the gases into the stratosphere on a regular basis.
CFC's contain Chlorine and Fluorine. They react with ozone and deplete it.
The ozone layer, which is part of the stratosphere, is the most affected by fluorocarbons. When chlorofluorocarbons or CFCs are released into the atmosphere, they migrate from the troposphere to the stratosphere after about 3 to 5 years. These CFCs destroy the ozone layer.
drop
the temperature already rise as you climb up in the stratosphere.
Stratosphere rises to a height of 10- 50 km of the ground. There is no certain distinction of layer in atmosphere.
It begins to get warmer from the sun's radiation.
stratosphere and thermosphere
they really affect the stratosphere because as they get there the ultraviolet rays decompose them to release chlorine the real ozone killer~chlorine forms an unstable compound with ozone which later reduces it to oxygen destroying the ozone layer quickly because chorine can be active of a century.