Most of what is termed as Acid Rain contains Sulphuric Acid, this is formed by a combination of Hydrogen Sulphide, Sulphur Dioxide and water. Answer: Acid precipitation is formed when sulfur oxides (SOx) and nitrogen oxides (NOx) are absorbed by water droplets. This forms sulfurous/sulfuric and nitrous/nitric acids. Some of the sulfurous acid can be transformed into sulfuric acid. The chemistry:
Sulfur dioxide and water form sulfurous acid (H2SO3)
SO2(g) + H2O(l) <--> H2SO3(aq) In some cases sulfur dioxide (SO2) oxidizes to sulfur trioxide (SO3)
2SO2(g) + O2(g) -> 2SO3(g) The sulfur trioxide (SO3) then combines with water making sulfuric acid (H2SO4)
SO3(g) + H2O(l) -> H2SO4(aq) Some oxides of nitrogen like nitrogen dioxide (NO2) react with water to form nitrous acid (HNO2) and nitric acid (HNO3)
2NO2(g) + H2O(l) -> HNO2(aq) + HNO3(aq)
Acid rain can make the soil too acidic, which may mess up the growth of certain crops. When acid rain falls into lakes, it can poison the water supply for any marine life, as well as animals that drink from that water source.
We can prevent acid rain by not throwing garbage into lakes (other person said that). And also we can stop using things that need to go to factories to be processed because it makes alot of smoke (pollution) to go into the air and rise up into the clouds witch make the clouds polluted and then rain acid rain down to the ground
Amino acids make up proteins.
Suppose a bulldozer knocked down your home. That would be a disruption of your habitat. More generally the expression applies to wildlife. Draining a swamp disrupts the habitat of species native to that swamp. Clearing land for agriculture, building fences or freeways that divide up habitat, clear cutting forest--all of these things serve as somewhat typical disruptions of habitat. Other things might be changing the climate, for example, by pumping up greenhouse gasses. Acid rain might make a lake uninhabitable for fish. Habitat disruptions need not be caused by men--a volcanic eruption dumping megatons of ash over an area can also be a habitat disruption.
Four items that make a protein are carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen and oxygen. These are the four items that make up an amino acid. Protein is made up of amino acids.
pollution goes up into the sky, then the acid rain will make you cry.
Acid rain speeds up the process of weathering!
Yes, the level of acid rain can increase. As acid rain falls on objects that have already been hit with acid rain, the acid builds up and becomes stronger.
The primary acids that make up acid rain are sulfuric acid (H2SO4) and nitric acid (HNO3). These acids form in the atmosphere when sulfur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen oxides (NOx) are released from burning fossil fuels and react with water vapor.
Yes. In fact sulphuric acid is the main body of what makes up acid rain.
aliens do first they throw up green acid and it goes down to earth and that is acid rain
Killarney was severely affected by acid rain in the late 1900's mostly because of the superstack in Sudbury. It was built to let sulphur dioxide, and other gasses, as well as nickel and lead smelter away from the city of Sudbury. These gasses go out into the atmosphere and come back as acid rain, which stained the quartzite rock charcoal black, while it used to be pinkish-gray, and it made the lakes and rivers in Killarney so acidic that most of the plant and animal life in them died. I hope this answers your question, I was just up in Killarney and had to do a report for school on this topic.
Acid rain isn't immediately dangerous to humans, but it messes up the chemistry in nature.
Acid rain
Yes, acid rain is an outdoor pollutant. It is formed when sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides are released into the atmosphere and react with water vapor, forming acidic compounds that fall back to Earth as rain or snow.
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.
Carbon MonoxideCarbon DioxideNitrogen OxidesSulfur dioxides