I think it is like how you can't see oxygen, but you can see liquid oxygen...
here is a way to find out... breath in, then breath out... do you see anything?... no, the stuff you breath out is carbon dioxide.So the answer is yes... but when you can see your breath sometimes (usually in winter), that is because your breath is warm and the air is cold. Not because the cold makes carbon dioxide visible.
Even though Carbon Dioxide gas is the heaviest of the gases that make up our atmosphere. Breathing them out of your lungs heats up those Carbon Dioxide molecules to your body temperature and this helps them to rise into the atmosphere and as they cool they fall.
You can see dry ice fog even though carbon dioxide is invisible due to water vapor. The visible fog is from ambient water vapor that is condensed by the extreme cold of dry ice. Without plenty of ambient water vapor, the fog output of dry ice is reduced. This is another reason why dry ice foggers often involve hot water.
No, breaking up a carbon dioxide molecule would result in the formation of separate carbon and oxygen atoms or molecules, depending on the method used. Breaking the bonds of the carbon dioxide molecule would disrupt its structure and composition, resulting in different chemical species than the original carbon dioxide molecule.
Atmospheric carbon dioxide levels are increasing because human activities, such as burning fossil fuels, release more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere than natural processes can remove. This imbalance leads to a buildup of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, even though the total amount of carbon on Earth remains relatively constant.
No, carbon dioxide is not a chemical property. In fact, it isn't even a property. It is a molecule.
Plant use carbon-dioxide for respiration. They absorb the carbon molecules and release the oxygen molecules into the air.
no
This is a somewhat controversial question, but most chemists answer "no", because, even though it contains carbon, it does not contain any group that could easily be replaced by a hydrogen atom.
Flying generally consumes fuel and therefore emits carbon dioxide. Even birds exhale more carbon dioxide when they are flying. Helium baloons can fly without emitting carbon dioxide, however.
It is a Question of keeping the proper Balance of the various Reactants.
Even a weak acid such as vinegar, added to limestone, will produce carbon Dioxide.