true.
Oxides of sulfur and nitrogen that combine with water vapor can cause acid rain. This occurs when these oxides react with water in the atmosphere to form sulfuric acid and nitric acid, which then fall to the ground in precipitation, damaging plants, aquatic ecosystems, and infrastructure.
Oxides of sulfur and nitrogen that combine with water vapor create acid rain. This phenomenon can have harmful effects on the environment and can lead to the acidification of soil and bodies of water, affecting plant and animal life.
The main gases in the air that cause acid rain are sulfur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen oxides (NOx). When these gases react with water vapor in the atmosphere, they form sulfuric acid and nitric acid, which can then fall to the ground as acid rain.
Nitrogen and sulphur oxides are poisonous gases which are released from vehicles and industries. They are poisonous and cause breathing problems and other respiratory problems. Not only this, these gases are most commonly referred air pollutants. Nitrogen oxides are among the few ozone depletors.
Sulfur oxides are typically identified through air quality monitoring stations that measure levels of sulfur dioxide (SO2) and other sulfur oxides in the atmosphere. Additionally, industrial sources such as power plants and refineries may be identified as significant emitters of sulfur oxides through emissions reporting and regulatory inspections.
Acid Rain
Acid rain is caused by sulfur and nitrogen oxides.
Oxides of sulfur and nitrogen that combine with water vapor can cause acid rain. This occurs when these oxides react with water in the atmosphere to form sulfuric acid and nitric acid, which then fall to the ground in precipitation, damaging plants, aquatic ecosystems, and infrastructure.
No. Acid rain is the result of nitrogen oxides and sulfur oxides put into the atmosphere by volcanoes and the burning of fossil fuels.
Oxides of sulfur and nitrogen that combine with water vapor create acid rain. This phenomenon can have harmful effects on the environment and can lead to the acidification of soil and bodies of water, affecting plant and animal life.
The main gases in the air that cause acid rain are sulfur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen oxides (NOx). When these gases react with water vapor in the atmosphere, they form sulfuric acid and nitric acid, which can then fall to the ground as acid rain.
Of itself no, but in the compound CO2 yes.
Acid rain forms when nitrogen oxides and sulfur oxides combine with water in the air to form nitric acid and sulfuric acid.
Acid rain is caused by a chemical reaction that begins when compounds like sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides are released into the air. Human activities are the main cause of acid rain. Over the past few decades, humans have released so many different chemicals into the air that they have changed the mix of gases in the atmosphere. Power plants release the majority of sulfur dioxide and much of the nitrogen oxides when they burn fossil fuels, such as coal, to produce electricity. In addition, the exhaust from cars, trucks, and buses releases nitrogen oxides and sulfur dioxide into the air. These pollutants cause acid rain.
high concentrations of compounds like sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides can cause acid rain if in the air.
Nonrenewable energy sources cause pollution through emitting carbon dioxide, nitrogen oxides, sulfur oxides, other green house gases, heavy metals as mercury, lead, cadmium, ... etc.
Oxides of Nitrogen, Oxides of Sulfur, Carbon Monoxide, PM10 (aka soot), and Carbon Dioxide (which won't technically kill you but may be causing climate change)