first of all scientists dont even know if the hole has allways been there, second the ozone layer stops some of the Ultra vilolet radiation from the sun, The Infra red radiation is what heats the earth. Ultra violet gives you a sunburn because of radiation damages the skin it's not burnt from the heat, and there is nothing you can do about it, If you want to do something good for the planet adopt a child from a third world country and be a good parent, that will make alot more difference to this planet
2006-12-29 03:31:55
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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We cannot fix the hole in the ozone layer. The earth rotates on an axis. This creates a vortex. In that the earth's axis is marked by the north and south poles, this is where the vortex becomes thinnest. Therefore, the ozone layer is thinnest at these poles, or in the phenomenon we witness at the south pole, there is a hole there. This hole in the ozone does not affect those of us on any continent besides Antarctica. So, this means that you don't get the direct heat of the sun unless you are in Antarctica, and even there you aren't getting much heat...you are just getting ultraviolet rays. If you would like to test the vortex phenomenon I have just prevented, run a sink full of water and drain it. When it begins to swirl, where is it thinnest?? The center.
You have heard all the tree-hugging environmentalists state that freon and cfc's cause the hole in the ozone. Has anyone ever seen freon? It is used in air conditioners. If you breathe it in, freon could suffocate you because it is HEAVIER THAN AIR. You would have to stand on your head to cough it up. Now, armed with that knowledge, how can something that is heavier than air make it all the way up to the ozone layer? It can't!! There is no way. This proves that the hole in the ozone layer is a naturally occurring phenomenon.
2006-12-29 11:30:36
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answer #2
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answered by countryboy_ga1014 2
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Solution is on its way since we don´t produce a big amount of CFC and other reactive gases. Unfortunately we cann´t accelerate its process, but atmosphere will be clean of CFC in around 60 years. Ozone is produced naturally by consuming oxygen under some physical and electromagnetic conditions, the amount of ozone required to recover it will be reached at that time.
Unless humankind produces CFC or something similar again.
I have read, some answers. Sorry, we know that no ozone hole was in the antartic 20 years ago, and we know it was 5 years ago. Sounds very reasonable that same hapenned in artic.
We know how holes evolved and we know mathematics enough to corelate graphics of hole evolution with human activities (CFC production)
Sciences are not so ignorant.
2006-12-29 11:30:58
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answer #3
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answered by carmenl_87 3
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We cannot directly do that. But we can help nature repair it perhaps by limiting emitting harmful gases.
2006-12-29 11:42:36
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answer #4
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answered by Mesab123 6
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You cant once damaged its damaged theres no going back from what we have started
2006-12-29 11:30:18
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answer #5
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answered by Lab Runner 5
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