Chlorine from tapwater remains for about 24 hours; however some cities/tows now also use chloramine, which does not come out simply by waiting, and must be removed using an appropriate dechlorinator.
I was reading a thing about tadpoles and it says if you leave the water in direct sunlight for 5-7 days all the chlorine will be gone(making it safe for tadpoles) but as this question is probably asking i don't knowhow long it takes chlorine to leavepools.
Chlorine does not need to evaporate from your water if you have Freshwater Fish. All you need to do is put water conditioner in it. But if you want to evaporate the chlorine leave it sitting out in an open container for an hour and it will evaporate.
I'm not sure what you mean by this. If you're asking how much chlorine do you need for your pool, see the link below for a great chart.
Chlorine lasts for a long time. It destroys 100,000 molecules of ozone.
6 months
24 hours
You can find ozone in any layer of the atmosphere, but in the lower layers it does not last long. The so-called ozone layer is in the lower portion of the stratosphere, at a height where it takes a long time to dissociate.
See "When will the ozone layer be gone?"
In the Precambrian time, 4.6 billion yrs. ago
The Ozone Layer, which is made up of Ozone molecules, or O3 molecules, occurs in the stratosphere. The stratosphere is the second layer up from the surface, above the troposphere, which we live in. (Sorry...long drawn out answer.) :)
Cfcs have a long atmospheric lifetime. because of this it will take many decades before the ozone layer returns to its former concentration.
You can find ozone in any layer of the atmosphere, but in the lower layers it does not last long. The so-called ozone layer is in the lower portion of the stratosphere, at a height where it takes a long time to dissociate.
See "When will the ozone layer be gone?"
In the Precambrian time, 4.6 billion yrs. ago
The Ozone Layer, which is made up of Ozone molecules, or O3 molecules, occurs in the stratosphere. The stratosphere is the second layer up from the surface, above the troposphere, which we live in. (Sorry...long drawn out answer.) :)
i dont kn
Cfcs have a long atmospheric lifetime. because of this it will take many decades before the ozone layer returns to its former concentration.
The ozone layer depletes everywhere. The poles develop an "ozone hole" in late winter / early spring at that pole. The hole has nothing to do with depletion, it has likely occurred every year for the last 500 million years.Depletion shows up in how soon the hole starts, how long it lasts, and how little ozone is present in it.
The magic 8 ball says: "My sources say No." No one knows where that particular "feature" is going. The record largest ozone hole was 2007, and the ozone hole for 2008 was not much smaller. The amount of UV-B that arrives at Earth's surface varies by year, and by 11 year solar cycle. Effects that are believed to be closely tied to the amount of UV-B that arrives on Earth's surface show a long-term upward trend. Plants absorb water vapor, and produce oxygen. What we do to plants, we do to the ozone layer (as much as we do anything to the ozone layer).
The chemicals in its smoke make a hole in the ozone layer. As long as there is a hole in the ozone layer, it becomes harder to fight global warming.
Ozone is a very unstable molecule. The energy required of formation of ozone is much greater than the reverse process that is the formation of oxygen and nascent oxygen. However there is an ongoing process of formation as well as depletion in the ozone layer which makes its concentration in the ozone layer constant. However due to the CFC's the rate of depletion is increasing thus creating an ozone hole in the ozone layer.
few days ago
Henri and CHarles worked for teh ozone layer democracy in star wars for a very long time charles became qui gon chin