It doesn't. Sulfur dioxide is fully oxidized, unless water vapor is also present.
No.
It releases CO2 into the air (CO2 is carbon dioxide) which destroys the Ozone layer
It releases CO2 into the air (CO2 is carbon dioxide) which destroys the Ozone layer
Keep the ozone layer intact. CFC's in the upper atmosphere destroys the Ozone layer and puts a hole in it, allowing more UV radiation in.
When you burn oil and coal, it emits carbon dioxide (CO2) and nitrogen oxides (NOx) along with different amounts of sulfur dioxide (SO2) depending on where it was mined. Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas, which means emitting it depletes the ozone layer, putting Earth at risk. Burning oil and coal also releases energy. That is why they are energy sources.
Sulfur dioxide is a type of pollution that volcanoes emit but it does'nt deplete the ozone layer. But there are still issues that lead to ozone depletion. If any ozone depleting pollution interacts with sulfur dioxide, it'll cause acid rain. Acid rain is deadly because it makes organisms too acidic and organisms that lives there gets destroyed. Then there will not be enough plants to take in pollution.
Carbon dioxide acts as a greenhouse agent. It causes greenhouse affect which then causes ozone depletion.
CO2 is carbon dioxide. It is the oxide of carbon. It causes ozone depletion.
chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), insecticides, partially oxidized molecules based on carbon or sulfur especially.
it thins the ozone layer that protects us fom ultraviolet rays of the sun. No, it certainly does not thin the ozone layer, where did you here such nonsense?
sulfur dioxide is a very powerful and common greenhouse gas which traps the suns UV rays and leads to global warming.
No.
Carbon dioxide causes global warming issue. This issue causes ozone depletion.
Plants are less susceptible to ozone and sulfur dioxide. It is because they have a filtering mechanism.
Yes, chlorofluorocarbons have an adverse effect on the ozone layer. These react with ozone and decompose it to deplete the ozone layer.
It isn't.
Volcanoes have a minor depressing effect on temperature (sulfur clouds reflect light back into space), and a minor depressing effect on ozone levels.