No. Even when CO dissolves in rain, it does not form any acid.
Mother nature has a way of absorbing carbon dioxide. It's called rain. Rain water combines with carbon dioxide to make carbolic acid. The carbolic acid falls to the earth and combines with rock and dirt to make a soft rock. People down wind of large smokestacks have a problem with the acid rain. Too much acid rain will kill trees. Planet earth does not get enough rain to remove the increasing amounts of carbon dioxide we are putting into the atmosphere. The carbon dioxide we are making adds to the problem of global warming.   I have wondered if putting water sprayers into our smokestacks will remove the carbon dioxide making acid water. That acid water can be mixed with soil to make soft rock. The soft rock can be used for landfill. Perhaps we can remove carbon dioxide in our smokestacks before it gets into our atmosphere in this way?
Burning coal produces carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and particulate matter. It also generates ash and trace amounts of heavy metals such as mercury and lead as by-products. These emissions contribute to air pollution, acid rain, and greenhouse gas emissions.
Carbon Dioxide from the atmosphere combines with water to form carbonic acid, it is a form of acid rain.
When carbon dioxide dissolves in water it forms carbonic acid.
Marble dissolving in acid rain is a chemical change. The acid reacts with the calcium carbonate in the marble to form new substances, such as carbon dioxide and water. This chemical reaction alters the composition of the marble, leading to its dissolution.
Not directly; carbon doxide can cause an acid rain.
Acid rain is acidic by certain pollutants in the air like, carbon monoxide/ dioxide.
Sulphur dioxide, carbon monoxide and fuel emissions.
ammonium, carbon, nitrogen, and sulphur
Yes, there is water is all kinds of rain. (Dihydrogen monoxide is a tricky way of saying H2O which is water.)
false
acid rain is when rain contains weak carbonic acid. This rain, as it falls, picks up carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and the air. all rain is slightly acidic because of carbon dioxide but it does no harm to us whatsoever.
Acid rain has a pH of 5.0 or less. Rain reacts with carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and forms a mildly acidic carbonic acid before it becomes rain.
an element is not the cause of acid rain but a compound called carbon dioxide co2.
Although all rain is slightly acidic due to carbon dioxide absorbed from air, the principle causes of problem acid rain are oxides of sulphur and nitrogen from fossil fuel combustion.
well I'm only eleven but i know the answer, yes it does but if you want to know how its makes acid rain it got something to do with the atmosphere and carbon dioxide Re: What the heck? Obviously methane has to do with the atmosphere and carbon dioxide, OH radicals in the atmosphere break methane into carbon dioxide and water. But no, methane does NOT cause acid rain! Acid rain is caused by sulphur and nitrogen oxides in clouds. Methane is simply a green-house-gas, it can't cause acid rain because it has a pKa of ~56 (weak acid), which is why a strong base such as OH- is required to break it. Sources: student of Earth Sciences
When acid rain falls on a limestone statue, carbon dioxide gas is produced as a result of the reaction between the acid rain (which contains sulfuric acid or nitric acid) and the calcium carbonate in the limestone.