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The Antarctic ozone hole during 2014

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-09-18, 22:40 authored by PB Krummel, Andrew KlekociukAndrew Klekociuk, MB Tully, HP Gies, Simon AlexanderSimon Alexander, PJ Fraser, SI Henderson, R Schofield, JD Shanklin, KA Stone
We review the 2014 Antarctic ozone hole, making use of a variety of groundbased and space-based measurements of ozone and ultra-violet radiation, supplemented by meteorological reanalyses. While the polar vortex was relatively stable in 2014 and persisted some weeks longer into November than was the case in 2012 or 2013, the vortex temperature was close to the long-term mean in September and October with modest warming events occurring in both months, preventing severe depletion from taking place. Of the seven metrics reported here, all were close to their respective median values of the 1979-2014 record, being ranked between 16th and 21st of the 35 years for which adequate satellite observations exist.

History

Publication title

Journal of Southern Hemisphere Earth Systems Science

Volume

69

Issue

1

Pagination

1-15

ISSN

2206-5865

Department/School

Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies

Publisher

Australia Bureau of Meteorology

Publication status

  • Published

Place of publication

Australia

Rights statement

Copyright 2019 The Authors. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.en_US

Socio-economic Objectives

180103 Atmospheric processes and dynamics

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