No, it does not stop. They are bound due to gravity.
No they are in space. No ozone in space.
The ozone layer is not a basic layer of the atmosphere.Starting at the Earth's surface:tropospherestratosphere (the bottom of which contains most of the "ozone layer")mesospherethermosphereexosphere (which extends into outer space)
Ozone layer is being monitored by scientists. Satellites are roaming in space for it.
Weather primarily occurs in the troposphere, which is the lowest layer of the atmosphere and is where most of Earth's weather phenomena, such as clouds, storms, and wind, take place. The stratosphere, above the troposphere, contains the ozone layer that absorbs the sun's ultraviolet radiation. Outer space is beyond Earth's atmosphere and does not have weather as we understand it.
Of course you can pass through the ozone layer, how could we get into space. It's just a layer of invisible something-or-not-whatsit-called stuff.
Ozone depletion is caused due to space shuttles. But not enough to cause a hole.
The clouds play a role similar to the ozone layer. Ultra violet radiation coming from the sun strikes the clouds and the ozone layer and is repelled back into space allowing only "safe" light waves to hit the Earth. The ground absorbs heat, and then releases it. The rising heat reaches the clouds and is reflected back down to the Earth.
No they can't. They will just displace the ozone.
No. The ozone layer would be more easily destroyed than cooled by anything lofted there.
Troposphere: The lowest layer of the atmosphere where weather occurs. Stratosphere: The layer above the troposphere where the ozone layer is located. Mesosphere: The layer above the stratosphere where meteoroids burn up upon entry from space.
The ozone layer is just a layer of gas, so while the ozone might get "stirred up" a bit, it does not form a hole. An ozone hole is not a physical hole; it's only an area in the ozone layer where the ozone levels are very low because of decomposition by chemicals. Consider this: If you move your hand through the air, does it leave a vacuum behind? No. The air around it fills in the space almost instantly. Same thing with the spacecraft going through the ozone layer.
ozone troposphere stratosphere outer space