˜yÐÄvlog

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ozone

[ oh-zohn, oh-zohn ]

noun

  1. a form of oxygen, O 3 , with a peculiar odor suggesting that of weak chlorine, produced when an electric spark or ultraviolet light is passed through air or oxygen. It is found in the atmosphere in minute quantities, especially after a thunderstorm, is a powerful oxidizing agent, and is thus biologically corrosive. In the upper atmosphere, it absorbs ultraviolet rays, thereby preventing them from reaching the surface of the earth. It is used for bleaching, sterilizing water, etc.


ozone

/ əʊˈzəʊn; əʊˈzɒnɪk; ˈəʊzəʊn /

noun

  1. a colourless gas with a chlorine-like odour, formed by an electric discharge in oxygen: a strong oxidizing agent, used in bleaching, sterilizing water, purifying air, etc. Formula: O 3 ; density: 2.14 kg/m³; melting pt: –192°C; boiling pt: –110.51°C Technical nametrioxygen
  2. informal.
    clean bracing air, as found at the seaside
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged†2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

ozone

/ Å′³úŲÔ′ /

  1. An unstable, poisonous allotrope of oxygen having the chemical formula O 3 . Ozone forms in the atmosphere through the process of photolysis, when ultraviolet radiation from the Sun strikes oxygen molecules (O 2 ), causing them to split apart. When freed oxygen atoms bump into and join other O 2 molecules, they form ozone. Although ozone is broken down naturally in the atmosphere through chemical reactions with other atmospheric gases (such as nitrogen, hydrogen, and chlorine), in an unpolluted atmosphere the formation and breakdown of ozone is generally balanced, and the total concentration of ozone is relatively constant. The formation and destruction rates of ozone vary with altitude in the atmosphere, and with latitude. Most ozone forms in the 15 to 30 km (10 to 19 mi) altitude range and in latitudes closest to the equator where sunshine strikes the Earth the most. The ozone is then transported northward and southward by wind and is generally most concentrated in areas above the Canadian Arctic and Siberia and above Antarctica. Ozone is used commercially in water purification, in air conditioning, and as a bleach.
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Derived Forms

  • ozonic, adjective
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Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms

  • ´Ç·³ú´Ç²Ô·¾±³¦ [oh-, zon, -ik, oh-, zoh, -nik], adjective
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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of ozone1

< German Ozon < Greek ó³úŲÔ, present participle of ó³ú±ð¾±²Ô to smell; ozo-
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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of ozone1

C19: from German Ozon, from Greek: smell
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A Closer Look

Ozone is both beneficial for and threatening to all of Earth's organisms, including human beings, depending on how high in the atmosphere it is found. Ozone is naturally produced in the stratospheric portion of Earth's atmosphere (in the ozone layer) by the action of high-energy ultraviolet radiation on molecular oxygen (O 2 ). By absorbing much of the Sun's ultraviolet radiation, the ozone layer serves as a sunscreen for organisms on Earth. In recent years the ozone has thinned or disappeared in parts of the ozone layer, creating an ozone hole that lets in dangerous amounts of ultraviolet radiation. Ozone holes are caused in part by the release into the atmosphere of industrial and commercial chemicals, in particular the chlorofluorocarbons (such as freon) used in aerosols, refrigerants, and certain cleaning solvents. Closer to Earth's surface, ozone is one of the so-called greenhouse gases that are produced by the burning of fossil fuels and cause the greenhouse effect. Ozone at ground level is also an air pollutant, contributing to respiratory diseases such as asthma.
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Along with gaseous reactive nitrogen, satellites burning up as they re-enter the atmosphere at the end of their lives leave tiny particles of aluminum oxide, imperilling the still-recovering ozone layer.

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Radiation is also much stronger in space without the protective ozone layer on Earth to buffer it, and it can have several impacts on the body at the cellular level.

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The EPA further warned that ionization technology has the potential to generate ozone and other potentially harmful byproducts indoors.

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Stardust acknowledges concerns about potential harms to the ozone layer and effects on climate patterns, he continued, and they are attempting to develop a specialized aerosol particle and a deployment mechanism to mitigate such effects.

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In 2013, China began curbing soot and ozone from industry and vehicles.

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