No, the ozone layer and the CO2 blanket are different. The ozone layer contains ozone molecules in it which the other contains carbon dioxide in it.
CO2 is carbon dioxide. It is the oxide of carbon. It causes ozone depletion.
It doesn't. The ozone layer has *nothing at all* to do with trapping CO2. Above the level of the ozone layer, intense radiation breaks CO2 down, so you get fooled into thinking the ozone layer had something to do with "trapping".
Charcoal burns to produce CO2. It causes ozone depletion.
Ozone is an allotrope of oxygen (O3).CO2 is the carbon dioxide.
CO2 (carbon dioxide) does not directly affect ozone, unlike the man-made gases CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons). However, higher levels of carbon dioxide have an indirect effect on the ozone layer, which lies in the stratosphere.In the lower stratosphere and close to the equator, increased CO2 slows the production of new ozone, especially in the spring.However, near the poles and in the upper stratosphere, CO2 increases the amount of ozone. It does this by preventing nitrogen oxide from breaking the ozone down.
Carbon dioxide, CO2, has very little to do with the ozone layer. The ozone layer will repair itself if we stop damaging it, which we have, by banning CFCs, chlorofluorocarbon gases, the chlorine of which was destroying the ozone molecules. Scientists hope the ozone layer will be completely restored by 2060.
CO2 is carbon dioxide. It is the oxide of carbon. It causes ozone depletion.
There is no buildup of CO2 in the ozone layer.
It doesn't. The ozone layer has *nothing at all* to do with trapping CO2. Above the level of the ozone layer, intense radiation breaks CO2 down, so you get fooled into thinking the ozone layer had something to do with "trapping".
Charcoal burns to produce CO2. It causes ozone depletion.
Ozone is an allotrope of oxygen (O3).CO2 is the carbon dioxide.
It releases CO2 into the air (CO2 is carbon dioxide) which destroys the Ozone layer
Provision to reduce CFCs & CO2 emission
Methane (CH4), CFCs are a few of those gases. Currently, we do not believe that CO2 has an effect on this layer.
CO2 (carbon dioxide) does not directly affect ozone, unlike the man-made gases CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons). However, higher levels of carbon dioxide have an indirect effect on the ozone layer, which lies in the stratosphere.In the lower stratosphere and close to the equator, increased CO2 slows the production of new ozone, especially in the spring.However, near the poles and in the upper stratosphere, CO2 increases the amount of ozone. It does this by preventing nitrogen oxide from breaking the ozone down.
No. There is negligible elemental carbon in our atmosphere. On Mars, CO2 is converted to CO, and ozone is formed. This mechanism is expected to be much weaker at Earth's higher air pressures. But CO2 presents no *chemical* challenge to ozone.
No. Ozone has no effect on CO2.