Chemicals in the propellants harm the ozone.
Energy can be scattered or absorbed by aerosols in the atmosphere. Aerosols are dust, soot, sulfates and nitric oxides. When aerosols absorb energy, the atmosphere becomes warmer. When aerosols scatter energy, the atmosphere is cooled.
Substances of potential damage are CFC's. They are present in Aerosols, Deodorants, AC's etc.
The three types of aerosols measured by NASA researchers are sea salt aerosols, dust aerosols, and black carbon aerosols. Sea salt aerosols are produced by the breaking of ocean waves, dust aerosols result from dust storms and other sources of dust in the atmosphere, and black carbon aerosols come from the combustion of fossil fuels and biomass burning.
Most inhalants have the potential to cause brain damage. These include solvents, such as correction fluid, aerosols and butane gas for cigarette lighters.
In order for you (humans) to live, you need aerosols. aerosols are one of the three important things you need in order to have a water cycle. the aerosols keep the liquid water stay into a liquid water, so if we didn't have aerosols we wouldn't be able to drink water. hope this helped! :)
Aerosols are tiny particles suspended in Earth's atmosphere. These particles can come from natural sources like dust and sea salt, or from human activities like burning fossil fuels. Aerosols play a role in climate change by affecting the amount of sunlight that reaches the Earth's surface and by influencing the formation of clouds.
no, aerosols are very, very chemical.
No, aerosols do not contain chlorine compounds.
Liquid droplets in air are called mists, smaller droplets are aerosols. Solid particulates are dust, smaller sized ar fumes.
false
Aerosols are harming the ozone. They contain the synthetic CFC's.
Aerosol particles can have both positive and negative effects on the Earth's atmosphere. While some aerosols can contribute to air pollution and harm human health, others can act as cloud condensation nuclei and play a role in cloud formation and regulation of the Earth's climate. It ultimately depends on the type of aerosol and its sources.