N
Neil R. P. Harris
Researcher at Cranfield University
Publications - 135
Citations - 7408
Neil R. P. Harris is an academic researcher from Cranfield University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stratosphere & Ozone layer. The author has an hindex of 41, co-authored 135 publications receiving 6709 citations. Previous affiliations of Neil R. P. Harris include British Antarctic Survey & University of Cambridge.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Interleukin 4 potently enhances murine macrophage mannose receptor activity: a marker of alternative immunologic macrophage activation.
TL;DR: Recombinant murine IL-4 is established as a potent and selective enhancer of murine MMR activity in vitro and induces inflammatory macrophages to adopt an alternative activation phenotype, distinct from that induced by IFN-gamma.
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Ozone trends: A review
TL;DR: In this article, a short description of the various techniques that provided atmospheric ozone measurements valuable for long-term trend analysis is given, including satellite and ground-based measurements, with a focus on ozone depletion in the northern and southern midlatitudes.
Journal ArticleDOI
Arctic ozone loss and climate change
Markus Rex,Ross J. Salawitch,P. von der Gathen,Neil R. P. Harris,Martyn P. Chipperfield,Barbara Naujokat +5 more
TL;DR: The authors showed that stratospheric climate conditions became significantly more favorable for large Arctic ozone losses over the past four decades, i.e., the maximum potential for formation of polar stratosphere clouds increased steadily by a factor of three.
Journal ArticleDOI
Prolonged stratospheric ozone loss in the 1995–96 Arctic winter
Markus Rex,Neil R. P. Harris,Peter von der Gathen,Ralph Lehmann,Geir O. Braathen,E. Reimer,Alexander Beck,Martyn P. Chipperfield,Reimond Alfier,Marc Allaart,Fiona M. O'Connor,Horst Dier,Valery Dorokhov,H. Fast,Manuel Gil,Esko Kyrö,Zenobia Litynska,I. S. Mikkelsen,Mike G. Molyneux,Hideaki Nakane,Justus Notholt,Markku Rummukainen,Pierre Viatte,John C. Wenger +23 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors reported the occurrence of the highest recorded chemical ozone loss over the Arctic region during the unusually cold 1995-96 Arctic winter. And they observed that ozone loss at some altitudes was observed long after the last exposure to PSCs.
Journal ArticleDOI
Observational evidence for chemical ozone depletion over the Arctic in winter 1991–92
Peter von der Gathen,Peter von der Gathen,Markus Rex,Markus Rex,Neil R. P. Harris,Neil R. P. Harris,Diana Lucic,Bjørn M. Knudsen,Geir O. Braathen,Hugo De Backer,R. Fabian,H. Fast,Manuel Gil,Esko Kyrö,I. S. Mikkelsen,Markku Rummukainen,Johannes Stähelin,Costas A. Varotsos +17 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the results of a new approach to calculate chemical ozone destruction rates that allows us to compare ozone concentrations in specific air parcels at different times, thus avoiding the need to make assumptions about ozone/tracer ratios.