Airborne antarctic ozone experiment (AAOE-87): end of mission statement

This statement has been prepared by the scientists who went to Punta Arenas, Chile to study the Antarctic ozone hole. This summary represents the views of the scientists themselves and not necessarily those of the cosponsoring organizations. The findings that will be presented are preliminary. Under...

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Main Authors: Gaines, Steven E, Hipskind, Stephen
Other Authors: AAOE Project Office, NASA Ames Research Center
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) 1989
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7353980
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spelling ftzenodo:oai:zenodo.org:7353980 2024-09-15T17:47:47+00:00 Airborne antarctic ozone experiment (AAOE-87): end of mission statement Gaines, Steven E Hipskind, Stephen AAOE Project Office, NASA Ames Research Center 1989-01-01 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7353980 eng eng National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) https://cloud1.arc.nasa.gov/aaoe/project/statement.html https://zenodo.org/communities/ceda-document-repository https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7353979 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7353980 oai:zenodo.org:7353980 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode info:eu-repo/semantics/other 1989 ftzenodo https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.735398010.5281/zenodo.7353979 2024-07-25T10:53:17Z This statement has been prepared by the scientists who went to Punta Arenas, Chile to study the Antarctic ozone hole. This summary represents the views of the scientists themselves and not necessarily those of the cosponsoring organizations. The findings that will be presented are preliminary. Under normal circumstances, scientists studying such a complex scientific issue would take many months to years to disclose their initial findings. However, the issue of ozone perturbation is one of justifiable public concern, and hence the public should be kept abreast of the current scientific thinking. It is in this spirit that we would like to share our provisional picture of the Antarctic springtime ozone hole. Furthermore, this will help to stimulate the scientific inquiry and debate that can only lead to an improved and timely understanding of the phenomenon. A much more complete and final interpretation of our findings will be forthcoming after a planned intensive series of scientific meetings and the submittal of a group of scientific papers to the peer review process. Previously curated at: http://cedadocs.ceda.ac.uk/54/ The publish date on this item was its original published date. This item was previously associated with content (as an official url) at: http://cloud1.arc.nasa.gov/aaoe/project/statement.html. This work was funded by: National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). Associated projects: Airborne Antarctic Ozone Experiment (AAOE-87) Main files in this record: aaoe_statement.txt Item originally deposited with Centre for Environmental Data Analysis (CEDA) document repository by Ms Belinda Robinson. Transferred to CEDA document repository community on Zenodo on 2022-11-24 Other/Unknown Material Antarc* Antarctic Zenodo
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description This statement has been prepared by the scientists who went to Punta Arenas, Chile to study the Antarctic ozone hole. This summary represents the views of the scientists themselves and not necessarily those of the cosponsoring organizations. The findings that will be presented are preliminary. Under normal circumstances, scientists studying such a complex scientific issue would take many months to years to disclose their initial findings. However, the issue of ozone perturbation is one of justifiable public concern, and hence the public should be kept abreast of the current scientific thinking. It is in this spirit that we would like to share our provisional picture of the Antarctic springtime ozone hole. Furthermore, this will help to stimulate the scientific inquiry and debate that can only lead to an improved and timely understanding of the phenomenon. A much more complete and final interpretation of our findings will be forthcoming after a planned intensive series of scientific meetings and the submittal of a group of scientific papers to the peer review process. Previously curated at: http://cedadocs.ceda.ac.uk/54/ The publish date on this item was its original published date. This item was previously associated with content (as an official url) at: http://cloud1.arc.nasa.gov/aaoe/project/statement.html. This work was funded by: National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). Associated projects: Airborne Antarctic Ozone Experiment (AAOE-87) Main files in this record: aaoe_statement.txt Item originally deposited with Centre for Environmental Data Analysis (CEDA) document repository by Ms Belinda Robinson. Transferred to CEDA document repository community on Zenodo on 2022-11-24
author2 AAOE Project Office, NASA Ames Research Center
format Other/Unknown Material
author Gaines, Steven E
Hipskind, Stephen
spellingShingle Gaines, Steven E
Hipskind, Stephen
Airborne antarctic ozone experiment (AAOE-87): end of mission statement
author_facet Gaines, Steven E
Hipskind, Stephen
author_sort Gaines, Steven E
title Airborne antarctic ozone experiment (AAOE-87): end of mission statement
title_short Airborne antarctic ozone experiment (AAOE-87): end of mission statement
title_full Airborne antarctic ozone experiment (AAOE-87): end of mission statement
title_fullStr Airborne antarctic ozone experiment (AAOE-87): end of mission statement
title_full_unstemmed Airborne antarctic ozone experiment (AAOE-87): end of mission statement
title_sort airborne antarctic ozone experiment (aaoe-87): end of mission statement
publisher National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
publishDate 1989
url https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7353980
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