Sounds like a very unpleasant cocktail...
1 doesn't happen
2 happens in the upper atmosphere
3 doesn't happen
4 doesn't happen
No. Sulfur dioxide is sulfur and oxygen. Carbon dioxide is carbon and oxygen. They are two different substances.
CO2 AND SO2 - dioxide is two oxygen atoms.
During Photosynthesis carbon dioxide is used and oxygen is released. In chemo-synthesis oxygen may be used but it releases Sulfur dioxide. Example of chemo-synthesis are sulfur bacteria.
Carbon dioxide (CO2).
no
The chemical name of a greenhouse gas that contains carbon and oxygen is carbon dioxide.
any chemical with oxygen in it like carbon dioxide, co2 or sulfur dioxide so2
Cs2 + 3o2 --> co2 + 2so2
yes of course gases such oxygen carbon dioxide methane carbon monoxide sulfur dioxide so and so forth ....
Oxygen, Helium, Natural Gas, Carbon Dioxide, Anaesthetics Gas, Carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide, Neon, water vapor.
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.
Sulfur + Oxygen = Sulfur Dioxide