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Acid Rain Acid rain forms high in the clouds in a gaseous form. Theses gasses
stay in the atmosphere until they come in contact with rain that dissolves the
gasses. A mild solution of sulfuric and nitric acid is formed. These drops fall
to the earth and get into our water table beneath the surface. From there they
are collected into streams, rivers, and lakes that eventually will lead to the
ocean. Rain isn't the only form acidity falls to the earth. About half of all
the acidity falls back through dry deposition as gasses and dry particles. The
wind blows the acid particles onto cars, homes, trees, and buildings.
The acid
discharge is then washed from the surfaces by rain. The runoff adds to the acid
already in the rain. And adds to the acidity of the water. Air pollution isn't
the only way acid rain forms. Lightning is nature's way of forming acid rain.
When lightning strikes, it breaks nitrogen's triple bond, it then combines with
O2 and then with water in the atmosphere to form HNO3 Acid rain changes the pH
of lakes and oceans, which can affect the lives of plants and animals that live
there. The rain also reacts to buildings made of marble. Marble is made out of
Calcium Carbonate and when mixed with acid rain it forms Carbonic acid.
This
acid will decompose further to Carbon dioxide and water. This will dissolve the
marble buildings. Countries with a great acid rain problem have been forced to
encase their sculptures in a transparent case to prevent corrosion. The only way
to try to prevent it from occurring is by scrubbing the coal. This process gets
rid of the sulfur impurities that could be extracted from the coal. This
solution is very expensive but is the only way to remove the sulfur from the
coal.
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