Acid Rain
| English | Chinese | Pinyin |
|---|---|---|
| acid rain | 酸雨 | suān yǔ |
| sulfur dioxide | 二氧化硫 | èr yǎng huà liú |
| nitrogen oxides | 氮氧化物 | dàn yǎng huà wù |
When rain turns sour
- Normal rain is slightly acidic, which is fine.
- But pollution can make rain far more acidic.
- This is acid rain 酸雨.
- It harms lakes, forests, and even buildings.
Where the acid comes from
- Burning coal releases sulfur dioxide 二氧化硫 (SO2).
- Cars and power plants release nitrogen oxides 氮氧化物 (NOx).
- High in the clouds, these gases meet water.
- They react to form sulfuric and nitric acid.
Acid rain is caused mainly by…
Sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides react with water to form the acids in acid rain.
A secondary pollutant
- No smokestack emits acid rain directly.
- It forms in the air when gases react with water.
- That makes it a secondary pollutant.
- The acid then falls as rain, snow, or fog.
How acid rain forms
Follow sulfur and nitrogen gases from a smokestack to acid falling on a forest.
Acid rain is a secondary pollutant because it…
No smokestack emits acid rain — it forms in clouds when gases react with water, so it is secondary.
Acid rain has a low pH, meaning it is ____ (the opposite of basic).
A low pH means acidic — acid rain can be far more acidic than normal rain.
The damage it does
- Acid rain lowers the pH of lakes, killing fish.
- It weakens trees and strips nutrients from soil.
- It slowly eats away stone buildings and statues.
- Winds can carry the gases far, so the damage crosses borders.
Acid rain can fall far from where the pollution was released, even in another country.
Winds carry the gases across borders, so acid rain often harms places far from the source.
Select all damage caused by acid rain.
Acid rain kills fish, harms forests, and erodes stone. It does not help crops — it harms soil and plants.
Acid rain is a secondary pollutant and a cross-border one. It isn't emitted — it forms in the clouds from sulfur and nitrogen gases reacting with water. And because winds carry those gases hundreds of kilometres, the country that burns the coal often isn't the one that gets the acid rain. That makes it a problem countries must solve together.
Downwind of the power plants:
- A country burns coal, sending sulfur dioxide high into the sky.
- Winds carry the gas across the border into a neighbouring country's mountains.
- There it falls as acid rain — killing the fish in clear mountain lakes and browning the forests, far from any smokestack.
Acid rain forms when sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides (from burning fuels) react with water in clouds to make acids. It is a secondary pollutant — it forms in the air, not at the source. It kills fish, weakens forests, and erodes stone, and winds carry it across borders.