It differentiates. Usually it is not strong enough to actually harm/hurt you, but sometimes it does. Because it makes all rocks weather faster.
No. NaOH is sodium hydroxide, which is a strong base, not an acid, and is not found in rain. Acid rain is rain that is unusually acidic due to the presence of nitric acid (HNO3) and sulfuric acid (H2SO4). Acid rain is still mostly water.
Sulphuric acid
cuz the acid from the lightening blends with the oxygen from the car egine and together they form a strong acid called acid rain
The acids in acid rain and vinegar are completely different! The acid in vinegar is ethanoic acid, CH3COOH. It is an organic, weak acid that when diluted in water wouldn't be strong enough to cause the damage that acid rain causes. On the other hand, acid rain contains heavily diluted sulphuric acid, H2SO4. This is one of the three strong acids- that can make metals like Magnesium, Mg, completely corrode. Therefore, this acid causes the damage, not ethanoic...
Acid rain is a weak acid, typically consisting of sulfuric acid (H2SO4) and nitric acid (HNO3). When it falls to the earth, it can lower the pH of soil and bodies of water, causing harm to plants, animals, and aquatic life.
rain with acid
Yes, Acid rain is rain with higher than normal levels of nitric and sulfuric acid.
carbonic acid rain and sulfuric acid rain
Only acid rain, normal rain does not contain acid.
Yes, acids can contribute to pollution of the earth through acid rain. Acid rain is formed when sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides released into the atmosphere from sources like factories and vehicles react with water vapor to form sulfuric acid and nitric acid. Acid rain can harm ecosystems, damage buildings and monuments, and contaminate water sources.
The effect that acid rain has is very dangerous it depends on how strong the material is because James Lam Wooloowin State School is Awesome! -Katy Perry
no, the acid haven't rain it