No. Steam is a form of water vapour.
Carbon dioxide.
Carbon dioxide.
Carbon is an element, but not carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide is a compound of carbon and oxygen.
Negative carbon dioxide emission is the opposite of carbon dioxide. The formula for carbon dioxide is CO2.
The carbon dioxide is a solute in a solution of carbon dioxide in water in a soft drink.
Steam, carbon dioxide
Steam, Sulfur dioxide, Carbon Dioxide.
Water vapour (steam) Sulphur dioxide Carbon dioxide Carbon monoxide
Water vapour (steam) Sulphur dioxide Carbon dioxide Carbon monoxide
The combustion of wood & coal in steam engines produces carbon dioxide.And Carbon Dioxide makes the air polluted because most living things need oxygen to breath not carbon dioxide.
Here are some: Steam, Carbon Dioxide , Sulfur Dioxide , Hydrogen Sulfide
No, that's impossible. Water becomes steam when it boils, and that's just water in the gas phase. Water is made of hydrogen and oxygen. There are no carbon atoms there to form carbon dioxide, and carbon dioxide contains no hydrogen.
Carbon monoxide, nitrogen dioxide, sulfur dioxide, particulate matter (basically soot), benzene, formaldehyde, and polycyclic hydrocarbons are the ones I know of. And (mainly) carbon dioxide and water (steam).
Solid. Dry ice is solid carbon dioxide( what you mainly breath out) , it is like asking: what states are there for steam? Steam is defined as water as a gas, the same kind of thing is with dry ice exept it's a solid for carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide can be solid, liquid or gas, the solid is made by making the gas a liquid by compression then to a solid by freezing.
Carbon dioxide.
because when you breath out carbon dioxide its kind of like dry ice. since your breath is always warm, carbon dioxide turns onto steam like when you put dry ice in water.
Around 1800, at the start of the Industrial Revolution, we began burning coal to drive steam engines. That's when carbon dioxide levels began to increase.