If one thinks about acids of a second it becomes obvious that there are bottles of vinegar in grocery stores, coca cola in cans and bottles, Orange Juice in cans, sulfuric acid in the batteries in cars, stomach acid in your own stomach and numerous other examples of acids kept in containers that they do not dissolve, It is the same in the natural world. Acid only dissolve things that they can react with (some bare metals, carbonate rocks, rust, etc.) Not everything is made of these materials so the majority of the world is safe from acids at all. On top of this acid rain is not a very strong acid solution. Its pH is not as potent as vinegar, cke, stomach acid and many other compounds.
Acid rain can dissolve stones.
acid rain doesnt exist
They corrode due to acid rain. Smoke from the factories dissolve in rain to form acid rain.
Yes, it does! marble is basic and reacts with the acid rain.
Yes, acid rain can dissolve chalk because chalk is made of calcium carbonate which reacts with acid to form calcium ions, carbon dioxide, and water. Over time, repeated exposure to acid rain can break down and dissolve chalk surfaces.
Acid rain causes pH problems and can dissolve heavy metals. These may cause poisoning..
The rain becomes acidic because Carbon dioxide, Sulphur dioxide and Nitrogen dioxide dissolve in rain drops to form Carbonic acid, Sulphuric acid and Nitric acid.
Yes, particularly limestone.
Compounds such as sulfur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen oxides (NOx) can cause acid rain. These compounds react with water in the atmosphere to form sulfuric acid and nitric acid, which then fall back to Earth in the form of acid rain.
yes
the answer would have to be carbon dioxide
The acid rain can dissolve marble and is corrosive for iron railway lines.