Name: ___________________________________
Partners name: ___________________________________
Preface:
What is my latitude and longitude?
DIRECTIONS: Read
each instruction carefully
-Before we begin this activity, it is important to know the latitude and longitude of where you live. If you know your latitude and longitude in degrees, write it in the boxes below. If you dont know it, use an atlas.
Latitude:
. . . . . . . . . . Longitude:
If you dont know your latitude / longitude, or to be more precise, try...
Step 1- Go to http://www.mit.edu:8001/geo
Step 2- Enter the name of your town
Step 3- Enter your latitude and longitude in degrees above.
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SECTION 1: How
much ozone is above my head?
DIRECTIONS: Read
each instruction carefully
-Between your head and outer space is a layer of gas called ozone. As you have already learned, ozone protects you from harmful sun rays.
1. If you were able to take a giant net and
collect all the ozone that is DIRECTLY above your head, how thick
would the layer of gas be?
Take a guess... Make sure your answer is metric! ___________________
2. Convert your answer to #1 in mm, and multiply by 100 _________________
-You just converted your answer to DOBSON UNITS (DU)!
-A Dobson Unit is defined as a .01mm layer of ozone at 0C and 1atm pressure. (Simply put, it is how big the ozone layer would be at the surface and 32°F).
To better explain Dobson Unit, consider the following graph:

Courtesy: NASA-GSFC http://jwocky.gsfc.nasa.gov/dobson.html
3. Practice converting between DU and mm
of ozone at 1atm/0°C
(a) If I had 20mm-worth of ozone above my head, what is that in
DU? ______DU
(b) How thick in km would 5000 DU of ozone be? __________________km
4. FIND OUT HOW MUCH OZONE WAS ABOVE YOUR HEAD YESTERDAY:
Step 1- Go to http://jwocky.gsfc.nasa.gov/teacher/ozone_overhead.html
Step 2- Enter YESTERDAYS date
Step 3- Enter the latitude and longitude. (NOTE: You must enter NEGATIVE numbers for SOUTHERN latitudes and WESTERN longitudes)
Step 4- Press Submit and write the answer below.
5. With a ruler below, draw the thickness of
the ozone over your head yesterday.
6a. How close were you to your original guess in question #1?
____________ DU
b. Why do you think they were different, and are you surprised?
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SECTION 2: How
does ozone change above your head?
DIRECTIONS: Read
each instruction carefully.
-Ozone amounts are not stable, they change!
7a. Guess how long it takes for ozone amounts to change about 5 DU.
b. Guess the chage in amount of DU in one year above your head. (Simply guess what the lowest amount would be, and subtract that from the highest amount).
8. Lets find out exactly how ozone changes above your head. Use the website given in question 4 to complete the table below. (The ozone amount for yesterday is simply your answer for question 5.)
| DATE |
|
|
|---|---|---|
| Yesterday ( ..../..../.... ) | . | XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX. |
| 2 days ago ( ..../..../.... ) | . | . |
| 3 days ago ( ..../..../.... ) | . | . |
| Last week ( ..../..../.... ) | . | . |
| Last month ( ..../..../.... ) | . | . |
| 2 mths ago ( ..../..../.... ) | . | . |
| 3 mths ago ( ..../..../.... ) | . | . |
| 6 mths ago ( ..../..../.... ) | . | . |
| 9 mths ago ( ..../..../.... ) | . | . |
| 1 year ago ( ..../..../.... ) | . | . |
9a. Does ozone change more or less frequently than you thought in question 7?
. b. Is the ozone change more or less severe
than your guess in question 7?
10a. Although we have a rough idea of how ozone changes above
your head, why is the chart above probably not the best
way of finding the highest and lowest ozone values within the
past year?
. b. What would a scientist have to do to figure out the real
range of ozone values within the last year?
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SECTION 3: How
do we get ozone data?
DIRECTIONS: Read
each instruction carefully
Step 1- Go to http://jwocky.gsfc.nasa.gov/fltmodel/spacecr.html
Step 2- Read about the satellites (and look at their pictures) to answer the questions
11. What satellites gave us these pictures of the ozone layer,
AND what years did they supply data? Fill in the chart below.
|
|
|
| . | . |
| . | . |
| . | . |
| . | . |
12. Which satellite gave you the ozone information
from yesterday?
13. How high is this satellites orbit today? __________________
14. How long does it take this satellite to orbit the Earth? ____________
15. What was unique about how the satellite from July 1996 was
launched?
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SECTION 4-
Ozone changes all over the world--The ozone hole
DIRECTIONS:
Read each instruction carefully
-Every part of the globe has different amounts of ozone above it.
-By the mid 1980s, ozone amounts over Antarctica were so low, that
scientists called it the ozone hole.
Step 1- Go to http://jwocky.gsfc.nasa.gov/multi/multim.html
Step 2- Find the most recent ozone hole animation (Antarctica).
Step 3- Watch the animation (replay it if you need to) and
answer these questions.
|
|
16. What dates does the ozone hole seem its biggest and worst? _____________
17a. What appears to be the lowest ozone value given (roughly)? __________DU
. b. How thick would this layer be at surface
pressure? ________mm
. c. Use a ruler to draw that thickness in the space below...
18. Where is the lowest value on the last date of the animation?_______________
Step 1- Note the last date, and approximate the latitude and
longitude in degrees of the area you found in question 18.
(HINT: If you need help with the latitude and longitude values, you
can cheat by using http://jwocky.gsfc.nasa.gov/teacher/latlon.html )
Step 2- Go to http://jwocky.gsfc.nasa.gov/teacher/ozone_overhead.html
Step 3- Enter the latitude, longitude and date to find out the EXACT lowest ozone value.
19. What is the exact ozone value?
______________DU
Step 1- Go back to http://jwocky.gsfc.nasa.gov/eptoms/ep.html
Step 2- Find the most recent Northern Hemisphere low ozone
animation and play it.
20a. Is the low ozone over the North Pole worse
than the South Pole? ____
. b. Is the low ozone over either pole MORE than the low ozone
over your head?
. c. How do you know for sure?