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JOURNALS // Uspekhi Fizicheskikh Nauk // Archive

UFN, 2000 Volume 170, Number 11, Pages 1181–1202 (Mi ufn1811)

This article is cited in 23 papers

REVIEWS OF TOPICAL PROBLEMS

Artificially ionized region as a source of ozone in the stratosphere

A. V. Gurevicha, A. G. Litvakb, A. L. Vikharevb, O. A. Ivanovb, N. D. Borisovc, K. F. Sergeichevd

a P. N. Lebedev Physical Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow
b Institute of Applied Physics, Russian Academy of Sciences, Nizhny Novgorod
c Pushkov Institute of Terrestrial Magnetism, Ionosphere, and Radio Wave Propagation, Russian Academy of Sciences, Troitsk, Moskovskaya obl.
d Prokhorov General Physics Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow

Abstract: A set of physical and chemical processes occurring in a microwave stratospheric discharge of nanosecond duration is discussed in connection with the effect they may have locally on the ozone layer in the artificially ionized region (AIR) in the stratosphere. The AIR, to be created at altitudes of 18 – 20 km by the microwave breakdown of air with ground-produced powerful electromagnetic wave beams, is planned for use in the natural physical experiment aimed at active monitoring of the ozone layer (its internal state and a set of plasma-chemical and photochemical processes) by controllably generating a considerable amount of ozone in the stratosphere. Results of relevant theoretical studies are presented, as are those of a large series of laboratory experiments performed under conditions similar to those prevailing in the stratosphere. Discharge regimes securing the efficient growth of ozone concentration are identified and studied in detail. It is demonstrated that such a stratospheric ozonizer is about as efficient as the best ground-based ozonizers used at present. For typical stratospheric conditions (low pressures and temperatures T ≈ 200 – 220 K), it is shown that the intense generation of ozone in a microwave breakdown effected by groups of short nanosecond pulses does not virtually increase the density of nitrogen oxides — gases that play a vital role in catalytic ozone-decomposing reactions. The possibility of effectively producing ozone in prebreakdown electric fields is established experimentally. It is demonstrated that due to its long lifetime, ozone produced locally at altitudes of 18 – 20 km may spread widely under the action of winds and turbulent diffusion, thus leading to an additional — artificial — ozonization of the stratosphere.

PACS: 82.40.We, 94.10.Fa

Received: September 5, 1999

DOI: 10.3367/UFNr.0170.200011b.1181


 English version:
Physics–Uspekhi, 2000, 43:11, 1103–1123

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