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Sun Storms Deplete Ozone, Too 467

An anonymous reader writes "Turns out the sun itself zaps the ozone that protects us from the sun. LiveScience is reporting that the record-setting string of solar storms around Halloween in 2003 (including an X28 flare) set off a cascade of events that depleted the ozone layer over the Arctic in early 2004. In a nutshell, more nitrogen was created, and an unusually strong vortex of high-speed winds aloft brought the nitrogen down, where it contributed to cutting ozone by 60 percent over the polar region. In January, the a European scientist warned residents of the far north to basically stay out of the sun. While chlorofluorocarbons are still blamed for ozone depletion, scientists said this study shows they don't properly account for the sun's impact."
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Sun Storms Deplete Ozone, Too

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  • CAUTION! (Score:5, Funny)

    by inertia187 ( 156602 ) * on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @08:34PM (#11819286) Homepage Journal
    Do not look at record-setting solar storms with remaining good eye.
    • This "theory" has got a few problems. First of all we know without a doubt that for the last number of decades the major source of solar radiation - the Solar Energetic Particle events (SEPs) - are quite modest. This is known from ice core samples. I've seen the reports of the data myself and it's quite conclusive. In a nutshell our current space age has occurred during a very quiet, very benign time. To attribute solar sources to any current trends is ozone depletion is simply disregarding the data.
    • Or rather, do not sunbake with remaining non-cancerous skin.

      But finally, a legitimate reason to wear the tinfoil hat!
    • My question: (Score:5, Insightful)

      by djward ( 251728 ) on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @10:33PM (#11820259)
      In January, the a European scientist warned residents of the far north to basically stay out of the sun.

      In January, residents of the far north have no choice but to stay out of the sun.

      No wonder no one took him seriously.
      • In January, residents of the far north have no choice but to stay out of the sun.

        Above the arctic circle, the sun stays down for months; coincidently, it's down for exactly those months that this sort of problem can arise.

        Below the arctic circle, you get a few hours of twilight around noon. The sun never gets more than a few degrees above the southern horizon, and so the sunlight is being filtered through many miles of southern atmosphere, probably including quite a bit of ozone.

        No wonder no one to

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @08:34PM (#11819288)
    man has yearned to destroy the sun.
  • That's it (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @08:34PM (#11819290)
    I'm done using their Java. Here I come Microsoft.
    • by daeley ( 126313 )
      I'm done using their Java. Here I come Microsoft.

      Nah, screw Microsoft, get a Mac instead.

      Now I know everybody makes jokes about the Mac's ozone only having one Oxygen atom, but you can easily buy a third-party molecule with the three Oxygen atoms you're used to.
  • by Vicsun ( 812730 ) on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @08:34PM (#11819291)
    There is only one solution...


    Nuke the sun.
  • [PREDICTION] (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @08:38PM (#11819314)
    Let us now see how long it takes for someone, either on a slashdot thread, in the public discourse, or on talk radio, to take the jump that "multiple factors exist in the depletion of ozone" immediately leads to the conclusion "claims human interference are a significant detrimental factor in the depletion of the ozone are false"
    • Re:[PREDICTION] (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Why is it that every time there is yet more evidence released that human contribution to global warming is even less significant someone has to try and dismiss or minimize it?

      Show me a 'humans cause global warming' case that doesn't use the deceptive hockey stick or only take data starting at a local minimum right around the time of the industrial revolution (remember, we're still about a degree C below the Medieval peak) and I'll listen. Eagerly. Up until now, it's all been smoke and mirrors with a poli
    • Balance, my friend, balance. You have it the other way around ... the immediate claim is usually, "human interference is a significant factor in {insert favorite environmental issue here}". This assumption is frequently made before any actual research is performed. Doesn't matter if the problem would have happened anyway ... we're at fault because we're fundamentally evil, you see. Some people just plain don't like people, and would rather we all simply disappear in a rapidly-dissipating cloud of fluorocarb
      • This assumption is frequently made before any actual research is performed. Doesn't matter if the problem would have happened anyway ... we're at fault because we're fundamentally evil, you see.

        Not evil. Numbers, my friend, numbers. If one person shits into a lake, well, nothing happens. If 6 billion people shit into a lake (heck, pick any sea for that matter!), virtually all the life in it will be affected.

        A city of 1 million can do whatever to *try* to screw up the planet and it will not happen. A pop

        • {sigh} here we go. If anyone makes any criticism of the environmental movement, one needs to be properly chastised, because obviously one is ill-informed, and has not been shown the Truth. Spare me. I wasn't even talking about that anyway. I was trying to point out that both sides are perfectly capable of rationalizing their own point of view, regardless of what is. The popular notion is of the selfless environmentalist fighting a losing battle against the evil corporate overlords. But there are major corpo
    • Before pointing that out, let's also point out that volcanic activity seems to effect the ozone layer as well.
    • Close, but the more likely foaming-at-the-mouth reply is, "Bush is depleting the ozone layer."

      Come to think of it, methane is considered a greenhouse gas, depending on where it is, right? Shouldn't there be big ozone holes over Hollywood, D.C., and a Kinko's in Texas?
  • by bigtallmofo ( 695287 ) on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @08:39PM (#11819328)
    You have to hand it to chlorofluorocarbons... All those years in the pokey and they never fingered their co-conspirator - the sun.
  • Of course... (Score:2, Insightful)

    ...this means in any minute now we'll get one of those charming "See? We don't need to worry about things in the environment being damaged by man-made processes, because it happens by itself anyway!" posts. Well, before that happens, I'd like to pose a question. Namely, if things have the potential to break, and if nature can break things on its own...how does that justify anyone making it break worse than it would just by itself? Using this logic, it would be okay if a factory artificially generated to
  • Oh No! (Score:2, Funny)

    by daeg ( 828071 )
    In our next story, the drafters of the Kyoto Protocol have revised the agreement so that solar storms count toward each country's polution limits.
  • by the talented rmg ( 812831 ) on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @08:46PM (#11819396)
    With winters getting warmer every year, it's only a matter of time before we are up to our necks in industrially poisoned ocean. <a href="http://www.glacier.rice.edu/land/5_depositio nalsubglacial.html">Glaciers are receeding</a> at an alarming rate and El Nino only makes matters worse.

    It's interesting, though, that with all the talk from liberal groups like the Sierra Club about how industry is the culprit, that we come to find out that it might be the SUN ITSELF that's depleting the ozone layer! In the wake of the recent CBS debacle, maybe it's time we started viewing such activists with a more suspicious eye.

    Maybe it's time we stopped looking for more problems on earth, and start looking to controlling threats from outer space -- threats like solar storms and asteroids. With our current level of intercelestial preparedness, it would take only one oversized meteor or a solar storm to fry this intergalactic backwater we call earth to a crisp. We need to step up efforts to expand orbital missile defense and lunar and martian defense outposts or we'll have only ourselves to blame when some freak cosmic event destroys life as we know it.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @09:20PM (#11819684)
      The size of the hole(s) in the ozone layer is not the same problem as global warming. Greenhouse gases are irrelevant.

      - Ozone (a molecule with three oxygen atoms) can be broken back down into O2 + O. Like all chemical reactions, this process goes both ways: free oxygen atoms combine into O2, or with O2 to form O3. Ozone in the stratosphere undergoes this process naturally while absorbing UV from the sun.

      - Breaking oxygen to form ozone is a slow process as it absorbs energy. Breaking ozone to form oxygen progesses at a much higher rate.

      - There's a LOT of oxygen in the atmosphere. The stratosphere reaches an equilibrium where a relatively small amount of ozone breaking down quickly is balanced by a lot more oxygen being photolyzed slowly.

      - CFCs break down into chlorine, which catalyzes the O3 -> O2 + 0 reaction. This causes the ozone depletion direction to increase its rate, without an increase in ozone production. Thus, the total amount of ozone will decrease until a new equilibrium is reached at a lower level of ozone.

      - Note that the chlorine is a catalyst, and thus is not consumed in the reaction. One chlorine atom can destroy hundreds of thousands of ozone molecules while it's in the stratosphere. So, a relatively small amount of CFCs has a much larger effect on the amount of ozone.

      - Cold temperatures favor the ozone depletion direction of the reaction. This is why you see the hole appear first over the southern polar regions. That's the coldest place. Increases in the size of the hole and more northly locations indicate ever dropping levels of ozone across the atmosphere. If you think of the ozone as water in the ocean, then the ozone hole is an island sticking up out of water. Draining water from the entire ocean makes the island bigger, but that doesn't mean the water is only being lost at the island.

      - "Ozone depletion deniers" used to exist, much like those that currently object to global warming. They had various objections, such as no known mechanism to transport CFCs released at ground level to the stratosphere. You also used to see a lot of objections that have familiar analogs in the global warming debate -- for instance, suggestion of natural sources such as chlorine from sea salt rather than CFCs. Satellite observations have observed tagged chlorine atoms from CFCs in the stratosphere. We know it's human-produced stuff up there causing problems.

      - The chlorine will eventually be removed from the stratosphere as it combines with something other than ozone, though this process isn't as fast as we would like. By ceasing use of CFCs, the chlorine derived from them will eventually go away, and the ozone layer will reestablish at the old equilibrium we used to know and love. Changing human behavior can fix this problem as well as cause it.

      • One correction:

        Cold temperatures favor the ozone depletion direction of the reaction. This is why you see the hole appear first over the southern polar regions.

        Perhaps, but don't forget that ozone is created by UV hitting O2. In the polar regions in winter (when the hole happens) there is no sun, and thus no ozone creation. Those natural processes you have cited are all there working to destroy ozone, but nothing is creating it at the time.

    • by nels_tomlinson ( 106413 ) on Wednesday March 02, 2005 @01:21AM (#11821107) Homepage
      Some glaciers are receding, some aren't. Which ones are doing which varies from year to year.

      Antarctica seems to be cooling, and its coastal ice pack is thicker than ever.

      I do hope you're right about global warming, because global cooling looks at least as probable, given the few hard facts we actually know. Global warming would clearly leave the world a better place for all of us (especially the world's poor and hungry!), with more rainfall, warmer winters, more food, and so on. Global cooling, on the other hand, would probably kill more of the poor folks in Africa than the muslims' genocide and AIDS and Kyoto all put together.

      I've got some links to facts and discussion of glaciers, ice packs, temperature series and so on at http://geocities.com/nelstomlinson/globalwarming.h tml [geocities.com]

  • Such is the way of the world. And please be able to take care of the joke.
  • Aurora and such (Score:5, Informative)

    by lecithin ( 745575 ) on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @08:50PM (#11819441)
    If you missed the Aurora Show this fall, you missed something special. The Aurora were intense and visible in most urban places. (Including me in Minneapolis)

    For information on when flares and aurora are possible, see the following pages:
    aurora alert- http://www.xs4all.nl/~carlkop/auralert.html/ [xs4all.nl]
    for more of a daily "this is cool stuff in space" see
    SpaceWeather.com http://spaceweather.com/ [spaceweather.com]

    Fun Stuff.

  • by Cheapy ( 809643 ) on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @08:51PM (#11819450)
    Recent events have showed us that we MUST cause a regime change for the Solarians. No longer must they live under the titanical rule of Sunddam Hydrogen.

    This evil dictator has created weapons of mass destruction, and has used them against nearby planets. A few years ago, we had them open their weapon factories to us so we could be sure they destroyed them all. But it has now come to our attention that they have weapons that could destroy the entire world.

    We can NOT stand by and let them do this. We must unite and attack them before they can destroy us. Anyone who is not with us, is with them. There is no other choice.

    The Earth must attack Sol.
    • You damn lemming, the president isn't planning on this attack to aid the Solarians (though I'm sure he's not above milking it for his coming re-election), he's just doing it for the energy, to ensure our infastructure doesn't collapse.

      WMD my ass, he just wants to build solar panels there so our country can get the sunlight first.
    • You first.

    • Recent events have showed us that we MUST cause a regime change for the Solarians. No longer must they live under the titanical rule of Sunddam Hydrogen.

      Oh, sure, you only want invade the places that are rich in energy sources. What if the people of Pluto were being crushed by a brutal dictator? Huh? Huh? Oh, wait - maybe they have plutonium...

  • Who'da thunk it? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by DesScorp ( 410532 ) on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @08:56PM (#11819492) Journal
    Wow....massive environmental changes can be caused by...OTHER ENVIRONMENTAL changes!

    This has been my biggest gripe with environmental groups. Almost none of them take into account the fact that the Earth has radically "re-organized" itself (for lack of a better word) several times BEFORE man ever came along, and we don't yet understand how or why. We've had several radical changes in global temperature, sea levels, atmosphere composition, etc, most before man ever walked the Earth.
    • Re:Who'da thunk it? (Score:3, Informative)

      by weighn ( 578357 )
      Earth has radically "re-organized" itself (for lack of a better word) several times BEFORE

      yes, but significant climate change is occuring now in mere generations rather than over k's of years.
      This article [le.ac.uk] is more to do with global warming (as opposed to ozone depletion), but it gives a good perspective.

    • my response (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Khashishi ( 775369 ) on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @09:32PM (#11819783) Journal
      It's ok that the Earth radically re-organized itself in the distant past before humans came along.

      It's not ok from a human standpoint for the Earth to radically re-organize itself now.

      Really, we should do everything in our power to keep the Earth rather like it has been for the last 10000 years.
      • Re:my response (Score:2, Insightful)

        by pipingguy ( 566974 )

        Really, we should do everything in our power...

        When it comes to the earth, it's climate and other unpredictable fluid dynamics-type universal (chaos theory, anyone?) issues, we have no power. Get used to it.

        "Think globally, act locally" is mostly a leftist political meme, not a realistic point of view and should be replaced by, "Think rationally, act reasonably."
        • When it comes to the earth, it's climate and other unpredictable fluid dynamics-type universal (chaos theory, anyone?) issues, we have no power. Get used to it.

          This is the problem: We may not be physically capable of getting used to it. That is why we must attempt to prevent climate change --- not because Gaea will be unhappy, or because the holistic chi imbalance will desync the natural biorhythms of the universe, but because if things get too bad (where "bad" is defined by humans), we may not be able to

      • Re:my response (Score:3, Insightful)

        by joshv ( 13017 )
        "It's ok that the Earth radically re-organized itself in the distant past before humans came along.

        It's not ok from a human standpoint for the Earth to radically re-organize itself now."

        Really? Why? The most radical reorg came about when a strange new bacteria discovered photosynthensis. This little organism was wildly successful. It and it's descendent set about polluting the Earth's atmosphere with a previously poisonous gas - oxygen. This gas exterminated many of the species that came before, but h
    • by rhysweatherley ( 193588 ) on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @09:52PM (#11819942)
      "Wow....massive environmental changes can be caused by...OTHER ENVIRONMENTAL changes! This has been my biggest gripe with environmental groups. "

      Actually, it's the anti-environmental lobby that latches onto the natural cycles argument, using it as an excuse to do nothing. Because doing something usually costs them money, or results in lawsuits, or whatever.

      Environmentalists understand that there are natural cycles but are concerned that the natural cycles are being upset by human action in ways that will be very difficult to reverse the longer the upset occurs.

      The Sun's involvement in ozone depletion has been a fixture of atmospheric conditions for millions of years, and has reached equillibrium. Inject human-generated CFC's and the equillibrium is upset. We can't change the Sun, but we can change the human factors.

      • Re:Who'da thunk it? (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Brandybuck ( 704397 ) on Wednesday March 02, 2005 @01:35AM (#11821151) Homepage Journal
        Actually, it's the anti-environmental lobby that latches onto the natural cycles argument, using it as an excuse to do nothing.

        They're not using it an excuse to do nothing, intead they are using it as an excuse not to crawl back into the cro magnon cave the crawled out of! Environmentalists are against technological progress. When Al Gore advocated banning the internal combustion engine he was proposing just that. Gasoline engines may not be perfect, but until we have viable replacements for them, banning them is not an intelligent solution.

        There is not "anti-environmental" lobby, but there certainly is an "anti-environmentalist" lobby. Like it or not, environmentalism is a specific political ideology. Not everyone who wants to protect the environment is an environmentalist. Not everyone who wants to eliminate pollution is an environmentalist. Pretending that wanting to clean up the Earth is environmentalism is as silly as pretending that wanting to eliminate poverty is socialism.
    • Re:Who'da thunk it? (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Bad D.N.A. ( 753582 )
      No doubt that our environment changes over time. But the "theory" that solar activity is responsible for current trends in the ozone is FUD. Solar activity duing the last few decades has been quite low based on ice core samples that date back for thousands of years. It's clear that something has effected our ozone over the last few decades but any attempt to place solar radiation as the cause of this trend is simply ignoring the data.
  • phew (Score:3, Insightful)

    by potihani ( 863978 ) on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @08:59PM (#11819517)
    Indeed, the sun is in fact about half of the cause for ozone depletion involving CFCs. That's because that when CFCs drift up into the stratosphere photons, in their selfish and inexorable rush toward the earth, smack into them and bust off the chlorine . For shame, Mr. Sun. So, rather than eliminate the CFCs and thus the chlorine that breakz ozone down into 02 and free oxygen, we would do just as well to put up a Mr. Burns-style sun blocker. Now that would stop global warming. I gotta say, though, I'm really not willing to make the implied trade, I think I'd miss the aerosol hair spray a little less than food.
  • by rpdillon ( 715137 ) on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @09:02PM (#11819547) Homepage
    It is news that the sun destroys ozone, but the UV rays are also the reason the ozone is there in the first place:

    High in the atmosphere, some oxygen (O2) molecules absorbed energy from the Sun's ultraviolet (UV) rays and split to form single oxygen atoms. These atoms combined with remaining oxygen (O2) to form ozone (O3) molecules, which are very effective at absorbing UV rays. The thin layer of ozone that surrounds Earth acts as a shield, protecting the planet from irradiation by UV light...Ozone is produced naturally in the stratosphere when highly energetic solar radiation strikes molecules of oxygen, O2, and cause the two oxygen atoms to split apart in a process called photolysis.

    Linkage [theozonehole.com]

    So, yeah, the sun is the bad guy, but really, the sun is the good guy, too. =)

    • Actually, wouldn't the ecosystem be the good guy?

      Without the prehistoric fitoplancton creating oxygen as a byproduct of their metabolism, there wouldn't be oxygen in the atmosphere in the first place - ergo, no ozone.

      Meanwhile, greedy corporations destroy the ecosystem, the CO2 production is going overboard - who's the bad guy now?
  • by adeydas ( 837049 ) <`moc.xobni' `ta' `sadyeda'> on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @09:14PM (#11819644) Homepage Journal
    The ozone cover of our atmosphere is a dynamic process meaning that ozone is formed and destroyed at a constant rate as we speak. True that solar flares cause it to be destroyed but such phenomenon does not happen too often. In the time span between two such events the ozone can re-create itself. On the other hand, destruction of ozone by human made CFC's, freons, etc are spontaneous and hence causes permenant depletion.
  • by MSBob ( 307239 ) on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @09:22PM (#11819699)
    and yet we had a melanoma incidence rate of 1 in 150,000 in the 1930's and it's around 1 in 75 now. Yeah, it's all part of natural world and nothing to do with the rate of industrialization.
  • this causes global warming, not the other way around
  • We can save ourselves any time. We just need the merciless peppers of Quetzlzacatenango!

  • by suitepotato ( 863945 ) on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @09:35PM (#11819797)
    Think for a second... Has anyone PROVEN that there has EVER been an "ozone hole" ANYWHERE but at the poles? Like right over ANY of the industrialized nations that emit CFCs?

    Not to my knowledge or in any scholarly tract I have ever seen.

    It took until NOW for someone to think, "Hmmm... maybe the sun has something to do with the ozone layer..."

    The idea that a dynamic world affecting power source could create AND destroy isn't new. Witness the ring of fire in the Pacific Ocean. Subduction destroys, magma release renews.

    One wonders how any could miss the fact that the known ozone depletion spots happen to coincide with the planet's magnetic poles and thus where loads of solar charged particle radiation ends up, having to pass through the same ozone that the sun itself created.

    This isn't a troll. This is simple exasperation at the endless "human kind is responsible for all ills that plague the world". I'm sure superstitious islanders of the nineteenth century who survived Krakatoa agreed with that, but it ain't necessarily so.

    There seems to be some obsession among some people with the idea that everything should always remain as it is right now despite the fact that our own science proves to us that the world was different in multiple different ways over vast periods of time before we were ever a kink in the dna and logically will be short of our intelligent intervention and massive effort.
    • by allrong ( 445675 ) on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @10:22PM (#11820170) Homepage

      The reason the ozone holes form above the poles and not directly above the CFC source regions is due to the very cold atmospheric conditions at the poles.

      During the winter polar night, sunlight does not reach the south pole. A strong circumpolar wind develops in the middle to lower stratosphere. These strong winds are known as the 'polar vortex'. This has the effect of isolating the air over the polar region.

      Since there is no sunlight, the air within the polar vortex can get very cold. So cold that special clouds can form once the air temperature gets to below about -80C. These clouds are called Polar Stratospheric Clouds (or PSCs for short) but they are not the clouds that you are used to seeing in the sky which are composed of water droplets. PSCs first form as nitric acid trihydrate. As the temperature gets colder however, larger droplets of water-ice with nitric acid dissolved in them can form. However, their exact composition is still the subject of intense scientific scrutiny. These PSCs are crucial for ozone loss to occur.

      Source [cam.ac.uk]

      It should serve as a lesson to you that your actions can have effects beyond your backyard.

      Most scientists I know recognise that there are "natural" components to phenomena such as the ozone holes (eg volcanic aerosoles) and global warming. The concern is that human activities may exacerbate the effects and that the rate of change may be much faster than would otherwise be the case.

      If you ever wonder what affect humanity's actions have on the world and our society, look at the ruined land due to salinity in Australia.

  • by IvyMike ( 178408 ) on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @09:56PM (#11819968)
    There are a few misconceptions evident in the thread so far: This quote, from the ucsusa.org [ucsusa.org], makes it clearer:

    5. Is ozone depletion related to global warming?

    No. Ozone depletion and global warming are separate problems, though some agents contribute to both. Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) are the principle cause of ozone deletion, but they also happen to be potent heat-trapping gases. Still, CFCs are responsible for less than 10 percent of total atmospheric warming, far less than the 63 percent contribution of carbon dioxide. Thus, attention paid to CFCs has been on their ozone depletion role. This will change as CFCs are phased out and replaced by hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs) and hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs such as R-134a). These chemicals have little or no effect on the ozone layer but are strong heat-trapping gases. As their concentration in the atmosphere is already rising, the likely net effect in the future is that reductions in the CFC-related contribution to global warming will be offset by the presence of HCFCs and HFCs.
  • by PsiPsiStar ( 95676 ) on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @10:04PM (#11820027)
    more nitrogen was created

    Somebody please explain to the poster how elements work.
  • by steve_vmwx ( 824627 ) on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @10:08PM (#11820046) Homepage Journal
    .. is the "we ain't screwing the planet" lobby starting to sound like the tobacco lobby in the late 70's / early 80's ?

    "There's no definitive proof that smoking causes lung cancer..." Remember that one?

    Hmmm.

    We ain't going to Mars until we fix what we've done to this planet!

    Stevo
    • "There's no definitive proof that smoking causes lung cancer..." And sadly, there still isn't. The best we can say is, it is possible that one causes the other. Until you put a group of smokers and non-smokers in a scientifically controlled enviornment for years on end, you won't get the evidence you want.
    • by Moraelin ( 679338 ) on Wednesday March 02, 2005 @06:26AM (#11822016) Journal
      No, seriously. The thing about science is that everything has to be proven, and everything _can_ be wrong or superceded by a better theory.

      It means that yes, you're _supposed_ to question everything, be it the theory of relativity, or gravity, or global warming theories. That's what science is all about. Trying to see if you can improve the existing understanding of the world, instead of joining the lemming parrade.

      The moment you've found absolute truths, evidence be damned, that's no longer science. That's _religion_.

      It doesn't matter if it's about Christ, or lung cancer, or global warming. The moment you have your absolute truth and don't need no stinkin' scientists telling you about experimental evidence, or worse yet start accusing them of hidden agendas or being the enemy... congrats, you've reinvented the Inquisition. What lies that-a-way is not science, it's not environmentalism, it's religion.
  • In January, a European scientist warned residents of the far north to basically stay out of the sun. Um..hello? There is no sunlight in the far, far north during the month of January, just ask anyone in Barrow, Alaska. It would be nice to have even dangerous sunlight to avoid.
  • Wait! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by patrik ( 55312 ) <pbutler@kill[ ]ux.org ['ert' in gap]> on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @10:38PM (#11820299) Homepage
    Some things about the article seriously bother me, like "creating nitrogen" and "nitrogen gas is known to destroy ozone". If the most common gas in our atmosphere destroys ozone then why does it exist at all? Nitrogen (not as a gas) is important in the depletion process but not as the article implies...

    Before anyone claims that humans are no longer the cause for the ozone hole, please realize the depletion was caused because of CFCs. Ozone is depleted as a result of many things, CFC is one of the key components and is a non-natural factor. The increased UV and polar vortices that were a result of the solar activity along with a colder winter increased the depletion, but, it would never have happened at above natural levels without CFCs.
    Please read: A simple explanation [slashdot.org] that I posted a while back and a more complete explanation [cam.ac.uk] on how the ozone hole is formed.

    These chemical processes are extremely well known: We know that CFCs are the cause, we know that there are a lot of them near the ozone layer, we know they are man made. Therefore, we know we are the cause. All that these researchers found out is that these conditions will speed up the process, not that they are the cause of the process.

    It is unfortunate that even with the CFC ban it will take 100-200 years for the ozone hole to repair itself to pre-industrial era levels...

    Patrik
  • In the long run we are all dead - John Maynard Keynes And yes, he has been dead for almost 60 years now, so give the guy some credit for being right at least once.

    Individuals aside, I think this whole planet is going to be toast (literally), in the long run, courtesy of our friendly neighborhood star. Now there is irony for you. Think about it. (But not too much, if you are really smart, life is even more of a bitch than if you are not.)

    Remember, kids, this has all been covered before, see Existentialis

  • Poor understanding. (Score:5, Informative)

    by mcc ( 14761 ) <amcclure@purdue.edu> on Tuesday March 01, 2005 @10:59PM (#11820433) Homepage
    It appears large amounts of discussion here are happening with people not understanding anything at hand. I will attempt to clarify some things to the best of my ability. Please excuse me if this is not as great as it could be, as my source here is my memory augmented by google.

    The atmosphere is a very complex thing in both composition and behavior. For purposes of this slashdot discussion, though, about the only important thing about its behavior is that different gases exist in different compositions in different parts of the atmosphere, and these different gases block and reflect different frequencies of radiation. (Most of these gases exist in a cycle, where they are emitted out of the earth, usually by volcanic sources, then slowly fall out of the atmosphere, and are subducted back into the earth, where they're eventually re-emitted.) There are two specific important aspects to this. The first is a layer of ozone which blocks certain higher frequencies of incoming radiation from the sun. The second is a layer of "greenhouse gases" which block a lower frequency. This lower frequency of radiation is not so much important coming from the sun; however, it is important because when radiation hits the earth, it is absorbed and re-emitted as "longwave radiation"-- and this radiation has a frequency such that it is partially blocked by the greenhouse gases, keeping it inside the earth. All of this is very convenient for the forms of life currently common on earth, since the higher frequencies the ozone keeps out are harmful to this life and the lower frequencies the greenhouse gases keep in provide useful heat, keeping the earth from just being a big ball of ice like mars is. Perhaps if the atmosphere were different, life would have evolved differently and less or more heat, or more high-frequency radiation, would not be a bother. But it is the forms of life that live on earth right now we care about, specifically humans.

    The ozone layer is the important thing as far as this article goes. The problem is that the ozone layer has been depleting in recent years, starting around World War II, and accelerating in the 60s and 70s. In recent decades the problem has become so bad that the ozone layer actually is developing holes in it, around the north and south poles, mainly the south. This depletion has corresponded with increased levels of chlorofluorocarbons in the atmosphere. Chlorofluorocarbons, or CFCs, come from a number of sources. For example volcanoes put out CFCs in great quantity every time they erupt. When placed in the vicinity of certain gases-- specifically the gases found in the ozone layer of the atmosphere-- these CFCs catalyze chemical reactions which destroy ozone, converting it to oxygen. An individual CFC molecule, when it gets into the ozone layer, will thus cause this process pretty much continuously, until like all gases it falls out of the atmosphere. There isn't particularly any question about this, as these processes are easily experimentally reproduced. The other thing that isn't particularly a question is that the increased CFC levels from WWII on were a result of human industrial processes. CFC outputs by human industry after its first uses dwarfed the natural sources of same, leading to a continuous and steady increase in cfc levels far beyond what atmospheric processes are accustomed to. By 1987 it became clear that this human CFC output was having a negative impact on the ozone layer, leading to the adopting of the Montreal Protocol, a treaty which drastically reduced human CFC output with the goal of eliminating human CFC production entirely worldwide by 2010. The impact on CFC levels of the montreal protocol was dramatic and immediate; you can see here yourself [monash.edu.au] that as soon as the significant human CFC sources stopped at the end of the 80s, the steady increase in CFC levels flattened out and became constant. (I am afraid this graph comes from a

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