The bubbles of carbon dioxide produce a buoyancy effect.
Not on its own, and it depends on what is burning. A fire can only produce carbon dioxide if the substance burning with the oxygen contains carbon. And even then, if there are other elements, you will get more substances as products. Carbon will produce carbon dioxide and usually some carbon monoxide as well. Hydrogen will produce water vapor. Sulfur will produce sulfur dioxide. Magnesium will produce magnesium oxide.
HCl and Zn lack the one carbon and two oxygen atoms that make up CO2 (carbon dioxide) Therefore, they cannot produce carbon dioxide in any condition.
No, burning hydrogen produces only water, it does not produce carbon or carbon dioxide.
yes
No. helium does not produce carbon dioxide
A flat panel television does not produce any carbon dioxide during normal operation. The carbon footprint of operating an LCD TV is estimated at 215 kg per year on average.
Yes, forest fires do produce carbon dioxide.
Animals produce carbon dioxide. Animals produce carbon dioxide
it produces heat
Algae are plants and produce oxygen from carbon dioxide when exposed to sunlight by photosynthesis. At night they produce carbon dioxide though cellular respiration.
Yes. Plankton produce carbon dioxide during cellular respiration.
carbon dioxide :)
Yes. Burning carbon or a carbon compound will produce carbon dioxide.
Any burning (oxidation reaction) produce carbon dioxide.
Carbon and Oxygen
Only factories that use and burn coal produce carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Forest fires and humans produce the most carbon dioxide.