No. It is at its minimum at Earth's surface (where there is little energetic sunlight to make more, and plenty of things that cause it to decay), and in the exosphere (where there is so much energy almost everything is missing an electron or two, and collisions between atoms are too energetic to allow many captures). It has a maximum in the lower stratosphere, where UV-C shatters nitrogen and oxygen, and some of the oxygen later forms ozone.
Annually, each pole develops an "ozone hole" in late winter / early spring. Here the amount of ozone is reduced quite a bit by various sorts of contaminants... some sourced by Nature and some by Man.
hmm, your from lpu physical science?
No it is not. ozone is part of atmosphere.
The ozone is the triatomic form of ozone. It is present in the form of ozone layer in the atmosphere.
The ozone is present in the atmosphere as ozone layer. It is present as a pool of ozone molecules.
The stratosphere region of atmosphere has the ozone. It is present as the ozone layer.
Ozone rises in the atmosphere.
The ozone is undesirable in the tropospheric region of the atmosphere. It is termed as ground ozone.
It is a good thing for the ozone to be in the upper atmosphere. It is due to the fact that ozone in upper atmosphere forms the ozone layer.
Ozone does not react with rest of atmosphere. It is inert.
The ozone concentration is maintained in atmosphere by UV. They create and deplete ozone.
The ozone in the atmosphere is good ozone. It is there because of the UV. The UV created the ozone and they are responsible for it's destruction.
Ozone is found in atmosphere. It is present in stratosphere.