os | | Me "3. years appears to ve the average time they spend before descending to the ground, corresponding to an average annual rate of about ten to twenty percent of the amount in the stratospnere at any given time. descend. It is not clear as to just how they do finally It seems possible that the general mixing of the stratospheric dic with the tropospheric air, which occurs as the tropopause shifts up and down with the season as well as what is brought about by the jet streams, constitute the main mechanisms. The descent of the stratospheric fallout apparently is never due to gravity but rathex to the buik mixing of stratospheric air with tropospheric air which brings the radio- active faliout particles down from the stratosphere into the troposphere where the weather finally takes over. This mecnani.m makes the percentage fallout rate the same for all particles tco small to fali of their own weight -- and the same as would be expected for gases, providing some means of rapidly cemoving the gases from the troposphere exists, so the reverse process of troposphere to stratosphere transfer does not confuse the issue. The world-wide fallout from the stratosphere descends very slowly and one of the questions unanswered at this time is just at what rate it does descend. There have been various estimates from 109% per year to 20% or even higher. But everyone is agreed that che stratosphere does hold its cadioactive fallout for a xe ¢

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