The stratosphere, which at the top is the ozone layer. that is depleted by CFC which 6 to 10 years to get to it. that allows UV rays to get in, causing global warming hope this helped!
The ultraviolet light from the Sun heats the Earth, like in a greenhouse. The more production of carbon dioxide, from burning coal and oil, the more rising infra-red heat gets trapped in the atmosphere. In a greenhouse, the heat gets trapped inside because of the layers of glass.
The Earth's crust has layers, the atmosphere has layers, and certain types of cake have layers.
The greenhouse effect involves the troposphere and the stratosphere layers of the Earth's atmosphere. In the troposphere, greenhouse gases trap heat radiating from the Earth's surface, warming the lower atmosphere. In the stratosphere, ozone plays a key role in absorbing harmful ultraviolet radiation from the sun.
Well for example when a volcano erupts (which is a whole other story) it creates a whole load of toxic gases which adds to all the other pollution in the air which is putting holes in the ozone layer which is making the world a lot hotter and is causing global warming. Sorry if this is wrong I'm still in primary.
It is the stratosphere where the ozone layer is located that is affected by aerosols containing CFCs. When released, CFCs break down ozone molecules, leading to ozone depletion and increased UV radiation reaching the Earth's surface.
Global warming was not originally caused by CFC's. However they are also a reason behind it.
The ozone layer leads to global warming. That might lead to pollution.
Conduction transfers heat by direct contact with the surface of the Earth, affecting lower atmospheric layers. Convection transfers heat through vertical movement of air masses, creating winds and turbulence in the atmosphere. Radiation from the Sun warms the atmosphere and surface, influencing global climate patterns.
it is the ozone layer in the atmosphere because it is what keeps the atmosphere in check of what is happening in the atmosphere.
The ultraviolet light from the Sun heats the Earth, like in a greenhouse. The more production of carbon dioxide, from burning coal and oil, the more rising infra-red heat gets trapped in the atmosphere. In a greenhouse, the heat gets trapped inside because of the layers of glass.
Why are there so many layers in the atmosphere
The Earth's crust has layers, the atmosphere has layers, and certain types of cake have layers.
The greenhouse effect involves the troposphere and the stratosphere layers of the Earth's atmosphere. In the troposphere, greenhouse gases trap heat radiating from the Earth's surface, warming the lower atmosphere. In the stratosphere, ozone plays a key role in absorbing harmful ultraviolet radiation from the sun.
I dont think they do, Radio waves diffract less and arn't affected by the ionosphere which is the upper part of the atmosphere. Most electromagnetic waves are affected severely by the atmosphere, which is a good thing due to the strength they carry EXCEPT microwaves *Apparantly*.
Layers of the atmosphere are the stratosphere,troposphere,mesosphere, thermosphere and exosphere.
Well for example when a volcano erupts (which is a whole other story) it creates a whole load of toxic gases which adds to all the other pollution in the air which is putting holes in the ozone layer which is making the world a lot hotter and is causing global warming. Sorry if this is wrong I'm still in primary.
Temperature is the property used to distinguish the layers of the atmosphere