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  • Pretty much everyone's heard of acid rain: rain that's more acidic than normal because

  • it mixed with pollutants in the atmosphere.

  • Acid rain can corrode buildings, weaken nutrients in soil, and harm plants and animalsso

  • it's not very nice stuff.

  • But acids are only one side of the pH spectrum.

  • So what about basic rain?

  • Why don't we hear more about that?

  • Well, because even if it can happen, it's probably not worth losing sleep over.

  • While scientists do describe acidity in a few different ways, depending on what they're

  • doing, one of the most common is using pH.

  • And one way of understanding pH is to focus on the concentration of hydrogen ions in a

  • substance.

  • As pH drops, the substance is more acidic, and essentially there's more hydrogen ions

  • available for bonding.

  • And as pH goes up, the substance is more basic.

  • It either grabs hydrogen off of other molecules, or forms hydroxide ions that can grab free

  • hydrogen ions.

  • Pure water's pH is exactly 7, which is perfectly neutral.

  • And natural rain's pH is about 5.6; it's slightly acidic from mixing with carbon dioxide

  • in the atmosphere.

  • Rain can get more acidic if water in the atmosphere mixes with gases like sulfur dioxide or nitrogen

  • oxides, which mostly come from pollution.

  • And once rain's pH falls below 5, it's officially known as acid rain.

  • Acid rain can be surprisingly acidic: Some samples have been comparable to vinegar, or

  • even stomach acidwith a pH of around 1.5.

  • Because of how the pH scale works, that's about 10,000 times more acidic than normal

  • rain!

  • In principle, things could go the other way, too.

  • If atmospheric water mixed with the right stuff, it could become basic instead of acidic.

  • But rain's natural acidity means that it would need a lot of compound to turn basic,

  • and there isn't much stuff in high enough concentrations in the atmosphere to affect

  • rain so strongly.

  • Plus, we just release way more pH-lowering chemicals than pH-raising onesmaking

  • the challenge even hardernot that this is something to strive for.

  • But that doesn't mean basic rain is impossible.

  • Rain near deserts and other dusty places with calcium-rich soil tend to have more neutral

  • rain.

  • Calcium compounds are a pH-raiser when they mix with atmospheric water.

  • And there are even a few places where enough calcium or ammonia get into the atmosphere

  • by natural sources or pollution and turn rain slightly basic.

  • But it's not widespread.

  • Because so many more pollutants turn rain acidic, scientists have actually been searching

  • for ways to use the science of basic rain to their advantage.

  • When acids and bases react, they neutralize each other, making a substance that's much

  • less harmful and reactive.

  • And some researchers have considered releasing calcium carbonate or another base-maker into

  • the atmosphere, or leaving them on the ground in places affected by acid rain, to neutralize

  • the extra acid.

  • So even if basic rain isn't a thing most of the time in most of the world, the science

  • behind it might help us battle our environmental issues.

  • Thanks to our Patreon patrons for asking this weird question!

  • If you want to learn about more strange precipitation, check out our video about animals falling

  • from the sky.

  • And if you want to keep discovering all kinds of science with us, you can always go to youtube.com/scishow

  • and subscribe.

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B2 中高級 美國腔

如果有酸雨,是否有基本雨? (If There's Acid Rain, Is There Basic Rain?)

  • 38 2
    robert 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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