Lead/acid, wet cell, electrical storage device.
A car battery is a wet cell. Only recently have dry cells been introduced, but your typical car battery is a wet lead storage battery.
The electrolyte in a lead storage battery is a solution of sulfuric acid and water.
Lead dioxide on the positive electrode is reduced to lead sulfate during discharge in a lead-acid storage battery.
Generally, yes, they are the same. The term "lead storage battery" is a bit incorrect, but it conveys the idea that the battery in question is a lead-acid storage battery. These storage batteries are the ones we commonly find in vehicles. With sulfuric acid and water in the electrolyte, and lead and lead dioxide for electrodes, this battery, while having a low energy-to-weight ratio, can deliver some very high surge current, which is what the doctor ordered to start said vehicles.
A lead-acid storage cell (which is what I assume you're talking about) should have, at minimum, the "Corrosive" label.
No, a lead acid battery is a wet cell battery and a 9 volt alkaline battery is a dry cell battery.
A lead storage battery is recharged via a shocking sort of system. Pumping up the voltage in a lead storage battery by using something like a magnet held close to it as the direct current shoots through to it.
The substance that is reduced in a lead battery as it generates electric currents is lead dioxide. You can recharge the battery by reversing the direction the current is flowing.
Antimony
An energy storage filled with chemicals is called a battery. The chemicals are usually a solution of lead acid in water, hence the term lead-acid battery.
Lead acid, wet cell.