Monthly Average Erythemal Index (UV exposure) for 2000-2001 (WMS)
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The Erythemal Index is a measure of ultraviolet (UV) radiation at ground level on the Earth. (The word 'erythema' means an abnormal redness of the skin, such as is caused by spending too much time in the sun--a sunburn is damage to your skin cells caused by UV radiation.) Atmospheric ozone shields life at the surface from most of the harmful components of solar radiation. Chemical processes in the atmosphere can affect the level of protection provided by the ozone in the upper atmosphere. This thinning of the atmospheric ozone in the stratosphere leads to elevated levels of UV at ground level and increases the risks of DNA damage in living organisms.
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This animation shows monthly average erythemal index for 2000-01 through 2001-12. The image size is 288x180 pixels (288x176 pixels for the MPEG movie); each pixel corresponds to an area 1 degree in longitude by 1.25 degrees in latitude.
Duration: 5.0 seconds
Available formats:
288x180
Frames
288x180 (29.97 fps)
MPEG-1
1 MB
288x180
PNG
26 KB
80x40
PNG
5 KB
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Color scale for this animation showing low exposure values as shades of blue and green and higher values as yellow orange, or red. The units as joules per square meter.
Available formats:
320 x 90
PNG
10 KB
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