Many things can cause pollution. Smokestacks from factories, trucks and cars (vehicles), and even smokers pollute the air. Some have a larger impact on the air than others, but CO2 and smoke, etc. are what most people are talking about when they refer to "pollutants."
And, not only that, it can be caused also by cars, rubbish, factories, smoke, power stations are also some of the things.
Special note: We should stop air pollution by stop to do the things above. It is our responsibility to stop air pollution and our rights to breathe in clean air.
any thing that runs on oil. any thing that runs on oil.
Water vapor in the air....
Yes air polution can be caused air polution alourgh there are many other causes
Acid Rain
Acid Rain
Thermal inversion layers trap pollutants because they form a barrier in the atmosphere that prevents the vertical mixing of air. This causes pollutants to become concentrated and trapped near the Earth's surface, leading to poor air quality.
Answer: Many air pollutants can cause health damage but not all can cause cancer. Known carcinogens such as benzene, radon, tobacco smoke, asbestos fibers, PAH and others are emitted as air pollutants and therefore can cause cancer.
they are Gaseous
Primary pollutants are pollutants that enters the air directly from a source and Secondary pollutants are air pollutantsproduced by the reaction of a primary pollutant with some other pollutant
there are many pollutants. These are greenhouse gases.
one of the main causes of air pollution in cities is emissions from vehicles like cars and trucks. an old or poorly tuned engine will produce more pollutants in the air ,rather than a new and well tuned engine. so,it is checked for vehicle emission and air pollution safety.
Some Primary pollutants are like when humans directly put them in the air Secondary pollutants are like when pollutants react with Primary and other Primary pollutants.
Natural processes will eventually remove air pollutants, if we stop inputting them at such massive levels. The prospect of removing air pollutants is interesting and seems favorable, but is ultimately myopic. What happens even if we can suddenly remove pollutants from the air? Where can we put them? In the ground? This would undoubtedly engender new issues. No, the question is not how to remove air pollutants, but how to live without producing them.