Home About Us Feedback Download
     Advanced Search  
September 6, 2010
 India
National
Politics
Business
Sports
Sci-Tech
Entertainment
Travel
Health
Religion
Art - Culture
Diaspora
Education
 International
Pakistan
Rest of South Asia
Asia
Americas
Europe
Australasia
Gulf-Middle East
Africa
World
 Business:
 ASIA | US | EUROPE
 updated 1330 IST
 NIKKEI -2 11488 
 HANG SENG +51 13846 
 NEC -9 4164 
  Home » Sci-Tech   E-mail this to a friend   Printable version
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rocket launches may need regulation to prevent ozone depletion
4/1/2009 2:58:00 PM

Washington, April 1 (ANI): A new study by researchers in California and Colorado has suggested that the global market for rocket launches may require more stringent regulation in order to prevent significant damage to Earth's stratospheric ozone layer in the decades to come.

The study, which includes the University of Colorado at Boulder and Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, provides a market analysis for estimating future ozone layer depletion based on the expected growth of the space industry and known impacts of rocket launches.

Future ozone losses from unregulated rocket launches will eventually exceed ozone losses due to chlorofluorocarbons, or CFCs, which stimulated the 1987 Montreal Protocol banning ozone-depleting chemicals, according to Martin Ross, chief study author from The Aerospace Corporation in Los Angeles.

As the rocket launch market grows, so will ozone-destroying rocket emissions, said Professor Darin Toohey of CU-Boulder's atmospheric and oceanic sciences department.

If left unregulated, rocket launches by the year 2050 could result in more ozone destruction than was ever realized by CFCs, he added.

Since some proposed space efforts would require frequent launches of large rockets over extended periods, the new study was designed to bring attention to the issue in hopes of sparking additional research, explained Ross.

In the policy world, uncertainty often leads to unnecessary regulation, he said. We are suggesting this could be avoided with a more robust understanding of how rockets affect the ozone layer, he added.

According to Toohey, current global rocket launches deplete the ozone layer by no more than a few hundredths of 1 percent annually.

But, as the space industry grows and other ozone-depleting chemicals decline in the Earth's stratosphere, the issue of ozone depletion from rocket launches is expected to move to the forefront.

Highly reactive trace-gas molecules known as radicals dominate stratospheric ozone destruction, and a single radical in the stratosphere can destroy up to 10,000 ozone molecules before being deactivated and removed from the stratosphere.

Microscopic particles, including soot and aluminum oxide particles emitted by rocket engines, provide chemically active surface areas that increase the rate such radicals leak from their reservoirs and contribute to ozone destruction, said Toohey.

Today, just a handful of NASA space shuttle launches release more ozone-depleting substances in the stratosphere than the entire annual use of CFC-based medical inhalers used to treat asthma and other diseases in the United States and which are now banned, said Toohey.

The Montreal Protocol has left out the space industry, which could have been included, he added. (ANI)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    E-mail this to a friend   Printable version
Top News
  After hostage crisis, Nitish seek ...
  Stephanie Rice apologizes over ho ...
  Bihar Govt. can't take credit ...
  'Sex with Wayne Rooney was a litt ...
  Spot fixing: ICC's ACU to questio ...
  Tess Daly and hubby go on 'dat ...
  Cate Blanchett and hubby put envi ...
  For Brit females, worst part of b ...
  Asian cricket betting rings direc ...
  After Pietersen, Mascarenhas inv ...
 
World News
  Pak Punjab Law Minister shelterin ...
  Cellar girl reveals her 3,096- ...
  Oz voters favour fresh polls eve ...
  60,000 flood victims suffering fr ...
  North Korea to release South Kore ...
  Farmlands hacked out of tropical ...
  'Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan plans ...
  South Korean grandmother passe ...
  Clooney's 'The American' tops US ...
  Madonna, Ritchie fall out over so ...
 
Advertisement 


South Asian Videos
Bollywood On Demand
India On Demand
Tollywood On Demand
Kollywood On Demand
Hollywood Videos
India User Videos
Realtors India
Indian Friends
Indian Short Films
Post Classifieds
Bollywood Pictures
Hindi Lyrics
Hindi Songs
Bollywood Photos
Indian Videos
India Greetings
Play Games Online
Indian Recipes
National|Politics|Business|Sports|Sci-Tech|Entertainment|Travel|Health|Religion|Art - Culture|Diaspora|Education|
Pakistan|Rest of South Asia|Asia|Americas|Europe|Australasia|Gulf-Middle East|Africa|World|
Help | Site Map | Disclaimer | Privacy Policy | Publishers

©2009 southasianews.com, All Rights Reserved