Deck 19: Air Pollution

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Question
In cities, where less vegetation and exposed soil exists, the majority of the Sun's energy is absorbed by urban structures and asphalt, creating an urban heat island.​
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Question
When smog is composed of sulfurous smoke and foggy air, it is usually called Los Angeles-type smog.​
Question
Pollutants that enter the atmosphere directly, for example from smokestacks and tail pipes, are called secondary air pollutants.​
Question
The depletion of stratospheric ozone could cause suppression of the human immune system.​
Question
The greenhouse gas carbon dioxide (CO2) is not covered by the Clean Air Act.​
Question
The discovery of the ozone hole added urgency to the development of an international agreement called the Kyoto Protocol, which was signed in 1987.​
Question
​Certain pollutants that enter the atmosphere directly, such as from smokestacks and tail pipes, are called ____.

A) ​criteria pollutants
B) ​noxious pollutants
C) ​primary air pollutants
D) ​secondary air pollutants
E) ​reactive pollutants
Question
The original Clean Air Act in the United States was enacted in ____.​

A) ​1946
B) ​1955
C) ​1970
D) ​1977
E) ​1990
Question
Particulate pollution not only adversely affects the lungs, but can also interfere with the normal rhythm of the human heart.​
Question
​Particulate pollution with diameters less than 2.5 µm are particularly dangerous because they ____.

A) ​can penetrate deep into the lungs
B) ​dissolve easily in water
C) ​are chemically neutralized by carbon dioxide
D) ​dissolve easily in water and they are chemically neutralized by dissolved carbon dioxide
E) ​can cause eye irritation
Question
Although thousands of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) are known to exist, methane is the most abundant.​
Question
Smoke emitted into a stable atmosphere tends to spread horizontally, rather than mix vertically.​
Question
Concentrations of tropospheric ozone are normally higher at night and during the winter months.​
Question
​The smoke in London smog came primarily from ____.

A) ​exhaust from diesel engines
B) ​trash fires
C) ​factories in Eastern Europe
D) ​coal combustion
E) ​exhaust from automobiles
Question
Carbon monoxide is the most abundant primary air pollutant in the United States.
Question
​Collectively, particles of soot, smoke, dust, and pollen are called ____.

A) ​hydrocarbons
B) ​aerosols
C) ​carcinogens
D) ​haze
E) ​CFCs
Question
Sulfur-rich aerosols have the net effect of warming Earth's surface.​
Question
Sulfur dioxide (SO2) can enter the atmosphere naturally during volcanic eruptions and from ocean spray.​
Question
Air pollutants can come from both natural sources and human activities.​
Question
The primary source for all pollutants is from fuel combustion from stationary (fixed) sources.​
Question
​More than ____percent of the total PM2.5 particles emissions across the United States in recent years have been attributed to emissions from wildland fires.

A) ​2
B) ​5
C) ​10
D) ​25
E) ​50
Question
​The ozone hole is found in the ____.

A) ​thermosphere
B) ​troposphere
C) ​stratosphere
D) ​ionosphere
E) ​mesosphere
Question
​The origin of the gases called oxides of nitrogen in the atmosphere begins ____.

A) ​in the stratosphere
B) ​in the troposphere
C) ​in the mesosphere
D) ​with precipitation
E) ​with ice
Question
​Ozone, PAN, and small amounts of other oxidating pollutants are the ingredients of photochemical smog and grouped under a single heading called ____.

A) ​NOx compounds
B) ​volatile organic compounds
C) ​hydrocarbons
D) ​radicals
E) ​photochemical oxidants
Question
​Nitrogen dioxide (NO2) reacts with ____ in the atmosphere to form nitric acid (HNO3).

A) ​hydrogen
B) ​water vapor
C) ​ozone
D) ​carbon dioxide
E) ​sulfur dioxide
Question
​The most abundant volatile organic compound is ____.

A) ​sulfuric acid
B) ​chlorofluorocarbon
C) ​formaldehyde
D) ​methane
E) ​benzene
Question
​Photochemical smog is also termed ____.

A) ​London-type smog
B) ​subsidence smog
C) ​mixing layer smog
D) ​sea breeze smog
E) ​Los Angeles-type smog
Question
​The formation of ____ begins when ultraviolet radiation (at wavelengths of about 0.31 µm and below) dissociates some of the ozone into molecular oxygen and atomic oxygen.

A) ​water vapor
B) ​the hydroxyl radical (OH)
C) ​sulfur dioxide
D) ​acid rain
E) ​dry deposition
Question
​Once released into the atmosphere, chlorofluorocarbons remain about ____.

A) ​10-20 days
B) ​50-100 years
C) ​1-2 years
D) ​1-2 month
E) ​1000 years
Question
​The most plentiful primary pollutant is ____.

A) ​benzene
B) ​sulfur dioxide
C) ​carbon monoxide
D) ​carbon dioxide
E) ​methane
Question
​The main component of photochemical smog is ____.

A) ​ozone
B) ​carbon monoxide
C) ​sulfur dioxide
D) ​chlorofluorocarbons
E) ​volatile organic compounds
Question
​The so-called "ozone hole" is observed above the ____.

A) ​continent of North America
B) ​equator
C) ​continent of Australia
D) ​continent of Antarctica
E) ​continent of Asia
Question
​When the pollutant's value is the same as the primary ambient air quality standard, the pollutant is assigned an AQI number of ____.

A) ​25
B) ​50
C) ​75
D) ​100
E) ​250
Question
​Since the Clean Air Act of 1970, emissions of most pollutants have fallen off substantially, with _____ showing the greatest reduction.

A) ​sulfur dioxide
B) ​methane
C) ​lead
D) ​carbon dioxide
E) ​carbon monoxide
Question
​When chlorofluorocarbons are subjected to ultraviolet radiation, ____ is released which rapidly destroys ozone.

A) ​chlorine
B) ​nitrogen
C) ​carbon dioxide
D) ​carbon
E) ​water vapour
Question
​Suspended particles from sources in Europe and the former Soviet Union are believed responsible for the brownish cloud layer called ____ that forms over the Arctic each spring.

A) ​the ozone hole
B) ​Asian dust
C) ​Arctic haze
D) ​acid rain
E) ​acid fog
Question
​Volcanic eruptions are an important natural source of ____.

A) ​benzene
B) ​ozone
C) ​sulfur dioxide
D) ​carbon monoxide
E) ​chlorofluorocarbons
Question
​An air quality index value of 35 on a particular day indicates ____ conditions.

A) ​good
B) ​unhealthy
C) ​extremely hazardous
D) ​moderately hazardous
E) ​potentially hazardous
Question
​When water vapor condenses onto suspended air particles and they reach a diameter between 0.1 and 1.0 µm, these ____ particles effectively scatter incoming sunlight to give the sky a milky white appearance.

A) ​wet haze
B) ​Arctic haze
C) ​wet deposition
D) ​dry deposition
E) ​acid fog
Question
​What gas is produced naturally in the stratosphere and is also a primary component of photochemical smog in polluted air at the surface?

A) ​carbon dioxide
B) ​carbon monoxide
C) ​ozone
D) ​nitrogen dioxide
E) ​hydrocarbons
Question
​____ ecosystems seem to be particularly sensitive to changes in acidity.

A) ​Freshwater
B) ​Marine
C) ​Forest
D) ​Grassland
E) ​Alpine
Question
​A country breeze would probably be associated with a(n) ____.

A) ​large high-pressure area that forms over a city
B) ​hot and humid summer day in a large city
C) ​period of heavy rain that falls over a city
D) ​strong urban heat island
E) ​agricultural field located far from a city
Question
​Atmospheric stagnation is a condition normally brought on by ____.

A) ​gusty winds behind a cold front
B) ​light winds and poor vertical mixing
C) ​overcast skies
D) ​tall buildings in a city
E) ​movement of an upper level trough overhead
Question
​The stability of the atmosphere is determined by the way the air temperature changes with height, which is known as the ____.

A) ​inversion rate
B) ​mixing layer
C) ​mixing depth
D) ​lapse rate
E) ​stabilizing rate
Question
​On clear, cold winter nights, cities tend to ____ than rural areas and have ____ temperatures.

A) ​cool more slowly; higher
B) ​cool more quickly; higher
C) ​cool more slowly; lower
D) ​warm more quickly; lower
E) ​warm more slowly; higher
Question
​The mixing layer is a ____.

A) ​very stable layer that extends from the surface up to the base of an inversion
B) ​relatively unstable layer that extends from the surface up to the base of an inversion
C) ​very stable layer found upward from an inversion
D) ​very unstable layer that extends upward from an inversion
E) ​relatively stable layer that extends from the surface to the base of an inversion.
Question
​A country breeze blows ____.

A) ​from the city toward the country at night
B) ​from the city toward the country during the day
C) ​from the country toward the city at night
D) ​from the country toward the city during the day
E) ​throughout the countryside at any time of day or night
Question
​Sometimes a light breeze which may be called a ____, blows from the countryside into the city.

A) ​subsidence inversion
B) ​city breeze
C) ​cool front
D) ​surface inversion
E) ​country breeze
Question
​The urban heat island is ____.

A) ​warmer air temperatures in urban areas compared to surrounding rural areas
B) ​a concentration of energy use in an urban area
C) ​locating factories in a single location downwind from cities
D) ​use of conservation techniques to reduce energy use in cities
E) ​only created in cities where topography is a contributing factor
Question
​The carbon dioxide occurring naturally in the air dissolves in precipitation, making it slightly acidic with a pH between ____.

A) ​3.0 and 3.6
B) ​4.0 and 4.6
C) ​5.0 and 5.6
D) ​6.0 and 6.6
E) ​7.0 and 7.6
Question
​Which of the following would probably result in polluted conditions over a fairly long duration?

A) ​a radiation inversion
B) ​a subsidence inversion
C) ​a surface inversion
D) ​overcast skies
E) ​persistent winds
Question
​Air pollution emitted from industrial areas, especially products of combustion, such as oxides of sulfur and nitrogen, can be carried many kilometers downwind. Sometimes these particles and gases slowly settle to the ground in the dry form of ____.

A) ​acid fog
B) ​acid rain
C) ​acid precipitation
D) ​dry deposition
E) ​wet deposition
Question
​Studies suggest that downwind of a large industrial area ____.

A) ​average annual precipitation can increase
B) ​higher surface temperatures are observed
C) ​pollutants are more concentrated than in the city
D) ​average annual precipitation can decrease
E) aerosols resulting from pollution inhibit heat transfer
Question
​To help reduce emissions that lead to acid precipitation, the United States implemented ____ by which companies that reduced their emissions could sell allowances to other companies that had yet to do so.

A) ​the Montreal Protocol
B) ​the Kyoto Protocol
C) ​the AQI
D) ​a "cap and trade" system
E) ​carbon offset program
Question
​In the northeastern United States, emissions of ____ are primarily responsible for acid precipitation.

A) ​benzene
B) ​sulfur dioxide
C) ​carbon monoxide
D) ​volatile organic compounds
E) ​CFCs
Question
​Radiation inversions are not generally important for air pollution layers because they ____.

A) ​form at night.
B) ​only last a few hours.
C) ​form in heavy wind.
D) ​are disturbed by precipitation.
E) ​cannot exist during the day.
Question
​Pollution is most severe when a ____.

A) ​cold upper-level low moves into a region.
B) ​warm front passes through the area.
C) ​large slow-moving anticyclone moves into an area.
D) ​storm system begins developing to the west.
E) ​cold front passes through the area.
Question
​Which condition would act to prevent a buildup of pollutants near the surface?

A) ​light surface winds
B) ​a strong subsidence inversion
C) ​a large, slow-moving anticyclone
D) ​a deep mixing layer and strong ventilation
E) ​a shallow mixing layer
Question
​A study conducted in St. Louis, Missouri, showed that precipitation amounts downwind from the city were ____ than ____.

A) ​less on Mondays; on Fridays
B) ​greater on weekdays; on weekends
C) ​greater on weekdays; on weekends
D) ​greater in spring; in fall
E) ​less in spring; fall
Question
​In cities, where less vegetation and exposed soil exists, the majority of the Sun's energy is absorbed by ____.

A) ​cloud cover
B) ​city parks
C) ​the greater number of people
D) ​buildings
E) ​urban structures and asphalt
Question
To indicate the air quality in a particular region, the EPA developed the____________________,which includes the pollutants carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide, particulate matter, and ozone.​
Question
In sunny cities such as Los Angeles, the ever-rising automobile population and the large petroleum processing plants generate ____________________smog, which irritates the eyes.
Question
O + H2O ----> OH + OH​
In the above reaction, the OH is called a(n)____________________because it contains an unpaired electron.
Question
​Since the____________________of 1970, emissions of most pollutants have fallen off substantially, with lead showing the greatest reduction, primarily due to the elimination of leaded gasoline.
Question
Ozone (O3) forms naturally in the____________________when atomic oxygen (O) combines with molecular oxygen (O2) in the presence of another molecule.​
Question
Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) represent a class of organic compounds that are mainly____________________, containing only hydrogen and carbon.
Question
Strong winds tend to____________________the concentration of pollutants by spreading them apart as they move downstream.​
Question
​The cost of damage to building surfaces, monuments, and other structures caused by acid deposition is estimated to run into the ____ of dollars each year.

A) ​thousands
B) ​hundreds of thousands
C) ​millions
D) ​billions
E) ​trillions
Question
The main component of photochemical smog is the gas____________________.​
Question
In the 1970s,____________________were the most widely used propellants in spray cans, such as deodorants and hairsprays.
Question
​Polar stratospheric clouds are thought to contribute to the problem of ____.

A) ​global warming
B) ​ozone destruction
C) ​acid rain
D) ​photochemical smog
E) ​radio wave interference
Question
____________________air pollutants enter the atmosphere directly-from smokestacks and tail pipes, for example.
Question
Many suspended particles are____________________,meaning that water vapor readily condenses onto them.
Question
​A coning shape exhibited by a smokestack plume is indicative of what type of condition(s)?

A) ​inversion only
B) ​stable only
C) ​neutral only
D) unstable only
E) ​both inversion and stable
Question
​A looping shape exhibited by a smokestack plume is indicative of ____ conditions.

A) ​inversion
B) ​stable
C) ​neutral
D) ​unstable
E) ​both inversion and stable
Question
Due to increased industrialization, by the 1850s, London had become notorious for its "pea soup" fog, which was a thick mixture of ____________________.
Question
​A fanning shape exhibited by a smokestack plume is indicative of ____ conditions.

A) ​inversion
B) ​stable
C) ​neutral
D) ​unstable
E) ​both inversion and stable
Question
The two primary nitrogen pollutants are nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and nitric oxide (NO), which, together, are commonly referred to as ____________________,or simply, oxides of nitrogen.​
Question
​The stability of the atmosphere is determined by the way the air temperature changes with height, which is called the____________________.
Question
The term___________________matter represents a group of solid particles and liquid droplets that are small enough to remain suspended in the air.​
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Deck 19: Air Pollution
1
In cities, where less vegetation and exposed soil exists, the majority of the Sun's energy is absorbed by urban structures and asphalt, creating an urban heat island.​
True
2
When smog is composed of sulfurous smoke and foggy air, it is usually called Los Angeles-type smog.​
False
3
Pollutants that enter the atmosphere directly, for example from smokestacks and tail pipes, are called secondary air pollutants.​
False
4
The depletion of stratospheric ozone could cause suppression of the human immune system.​
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
5
The greenhouse gas carbon dioxide (CO2) is not covered by the Clean Air Act.​
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6
The discovery of the ozone hole added urgency to the development of an international agreement called the Kyoto Protocol, which was signed in 1987.​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
​Certain pollutants that enter the atmosphere directly, such as from smokestacks and tail pipes, are called ____.

A) ​criteria pollutants
B) ​noxious pollutants
C) ​primary air pollutants
D) ​secondary air pollutants
E) ​reactive pollutants
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
The original Clean Air Act in the United States was enacted in ____.​

A) ​1946
B) ​1955
C) ​1970
D) ​1977
E) ​1990
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
9
Particulate pollution not only adversely affects the lungs, but can also interfere with the normal rhythm of the human heart.​
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
​Particulate pollution with diameters less than 2.5 µm are particularly dangerous because they ____.

A) ​can penetrate deep into the lungs
B) ​dissolve easily in water
C) ​are chemically neutralized by carbon dioxide
D) ​dissolve easily in water and they are chemically neutralized by dissolved carbon dioxide
E) ​can cause eye irritation
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11
Although thousands of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) are known to exist, methane is the most abundant.​
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12
Smoke emitted into a stable atmosphere tends to spread horizontally, rather than mix vertically.​
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13
Concentrations of tropospheric ozone are normally higher at night and during the winter months.​
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14
​The smoke in London smog came primarily from ____.

A) ​exhaust from diesel engines
B) ​trash fires
C) ​factories in Eastern Europe
D) ​coal combustion
E) ​exhaust from automobiles
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15
Carbon monoxide is the most abundant primary air pollutant in the United States.
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16
​Collectively, particles of soot, smoke, dust, and pollen are called ____.

A) ​hydrocarbons
B) ​aerosols
C) ​carcinogens
D) ​haze
E) ​CFCs
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17
Sulfur-rich aerosols have the net effect of warming Earth's surface.​
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18
Sulfur dioxide (SO2) can enter the atmosphere naturally during volcanic eruptions and from ocean spray.​
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19
Air pollutants can come from both natural sources and human activities.​
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20
The primary source for all pollutants is from fuel combustion from stationary (fixed) sources.​
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21
​More than ____percent of the total PM2.5 particles emissions across the United States in recent years have been attributed to emissions from wildland fires.

A) ​2
B) ​5
C) ​10
D) ​25
E) ​50
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22
​The ozone hole is found in the ____.

A) ​thermosphere
B) ​troposphere
C) ​stratosphere
D) ​ionosphere
E) ​mesosphere
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23
​The origin of the gases called oxides of nitrogen in the atmosphere begins ____.

A) ​in the stratosphere
B) ​in the troposphere
C) ​in the mesosphere
D) ​with precipitation
E) ​with ice
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24
​Ozone, PAN, and small amounts of other oxidating pollutants are the ingredients of photochemical smog and grouped under a single heading called ____.

A) ​NOx compounds
B) ​volatile organic compounds
C) ​hydrocarbons
D) ​radicals
E) ​photochemical oxidants
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25
​Nitrogen dioxide (NO2) reacts with ____ in the atmosphere to form nitric acid (HNO3).

A) ​hydrogen
B) ​water vapor
C) ​ozone
D) ​carbon dioxide
E) ​sulfur dioxide
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26
​The most abundant volatile organic compound is ____.

A) ​sulfuric acid
B) ​chlorofluorocarbon
C) ​formaldehyde
D) ​methane
E) ​benzene
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27
​Photochemical smog is also termed ____.

A) ​London-type smog
B) ​subsidence smog
C) ​mixing layer smog
D) ​sea breeze smog
E) ​Los Angeles-type smog
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28
​The formation of ____ begins when ultraviolet radiation (at wavelengths of about 0.31 µm and below) dissociates some of the ozone into molecular oxygen and atomic oxygen.

A) ​water vapor
B) ​the hydroxyl radical (OH)
C) ​sulfur dioxide
D) ​acid rain
E) ​dry deposition
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29
​Once released into the atmosphere, chlorofluorocarbons remain about ____.

A) ​10-20 days
B) ​50-100 years
C) ​1-2 years
D) ​1-2 month
E) ​1000 years
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30
​The most plentiful primary pollutant is ____.

A) ​benzene
B) ​sulfur dioxide
C) ​carbon monoxide
D) ​carbon dioxide
E) ​methane
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31
​The main component of photochemical smog is ____.

A) ​ozone
B) ​carbon monoxide
C) ​sulfur dioxide
D) ​chlorofluorocarbons
E) ​volatile organic compounds
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32
​The so-called "ozone hole" is observed above the ____.

A) ​continent of North America
B) ​equator
C) ​continent of Australia
D) ​continent of Antarctica
E) ​continent of Asia
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33
​When the pollutant's value is the same as the primary ambient air quality standard, the pollutant is assigned an AQI number of ____.

A) ​25
B) ​50
C) ​75
D) ​100
E) ​250
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34
​Since the Clean Air Act of 1970, emissions of most pollutants have fallen off substantially, with _____ showing the greatest reduction.

A) ​sulfur dioxide
B) ​methane
C) ​lead
D) ​carbon dioxide
E) ​carbon monoxide
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
​When chlorofluorocarbons are subjected to ultraviolet radiation, ____ is released which rapidly destroys ozone.

A) ​chlorine
B) ​nitrogen
C) ​carbon dioxide
D) ​carbon
E) ​water vapour
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36
​Suspended particles from sources in Europe and the former Soviet Union are believed responsible for the brownish cloud layer called ____ that forms over the Arctic each spring.

A) ​the ozone hole
B) ​Asian dust
C) ​Arctic haze
D) ​acid rain
E) ​acid fog
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
​Volcanic eruptions are an important natural source of ____.

A) ​benzene
B) ​ozone
C) ​sulfur dioxide
D) ​carbon monoxide
E) ​chlorofluorocarbons
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
​An air quality index value of 35 on a particular day indicates ____ conditions.

A) ​good
B) ​unhealthy
C) ​extremely hazardous
D) ​moderately hazardous
E) ​potentially hazardous
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
​When water vapor condenses onto suspended air particles and they reach a diameter between 0.1 and 1.0 µm, these ____ particles effectively scatter incoming sunlight to give the sky a milky white appearance.

A) ​wet haze
B) ​Arctic haze
C) ​wet deposition
D) ​dry deposition
E) ​acid fog
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
​What gas is produced naturally in the stratosphere and is also a primary component of photochemical smog in polluted air at the surface?

A) ​carbon dioxide
B) ​carbon monoxide
C) ​ozone
D) ​nitrogen dioxide
E) ​hydrocarbons
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
​____ ecosystems seem to be particularly sensitive to changes in acidity.

A) ​Freshwater
B) ​Marine
C) ​Forest
D) ​Grassland
E) ​Alpine
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
​A country breeze would probably be associated with a(n) ____.

A) ​large high-pressure area that forms over a city
B) ​hot and humid summer day in a large city
C) ​period of heavy rain that falls over a city
D) ​strong urban heat island
E) ​agricultural field located far from a city
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
​Atmospheric stagnation is a condition normally brought on by ____.

A) ​gusty winds behind a cold front
B) ​light winds and poor vertical mixing
C) ​overcast skies
D) ​tall buildings in a city
E) ​movement of an upper level trough overhead
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
​The stability of the atmosphere is determined by the way the air temperature changes with height, which is known as the ____.

A) ​inversion rate
B) ​mixing layer
C) ​mixing depth
D) ​lapse rate
E) ​stabilizing rate
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
​On clear, cold winter nights, cities tend to ____ than rural areas and have ____ temperatures.

A) ​cool more slowly; higher
B) ​cool more quickly; higher
C) ​cool more slowly; lower
D) ​warm more quickly; lower
E) ​warm more slowly; higher
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46
​The mixing layer is a ____.

A) ​very stable layer that extends from the surface up to the base of an inversion
B) ​relatively unstable layer that extends from the surface up to the base of an inversion
C) ​very stable layer found upward from an inversion
D) ​very unstable layer that extends upward from an inversion
E) ​relatively stable layer that extends from the surface to the base of an inversion.
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47
​A country breeze blows ____.

A) ​from the city toward the country at night
B) ​from the city toward the country during the day
C) ​from the country toward the city at night
D) ​from the country toward the city during the day
E) ​throughout the countryside at any time of day or night
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48
​Sometimes a light breeze which may be called a ____, blows from the countryside into the city.

A) ​subsidence inversion
B) ​city breeze
C) ​cool front
D) ​surface inversion
E) ​country breeze
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49
​The urban heat island is ____.

A) ​warmer air temperatures in urban areas compared to surrounding rural areas
B) ​a concentration of energy use in an urban area
C) ​locating factories in a single location downwind from cities
D) ​use of conservation techniques to reduce energy use in cities
E) ​only created in cities where topography is a contributing factor
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50
​The carbon dioxide occurring naturally in the air dissolves in precipitation, making it slightly acidic with a pH between ____.

A) ​3.0 and 3.6
B) ​4.0 and 4.6
C) ​5.0 and 5.6
D) ​6.0 and 6.6
E) ​7.0 and 7.6
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51
​Which of the following would probably result in polluted conditions over a fairly long duration?

A) ​a radiation inversion
B) ​a subsidence inversion
C) ​a surface inversion
D) ​overcast skies
E) ​persistent winds
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52
​Air pollution emitted from industrial areas, especially products of combustion, such as oxides of sulfur and nitrogen, can be carried many kilometers downwind. Sometimes these particles and gases slowly settle to the ground in the dry form of ____.

A) ​acid fog
B) ​acid rain
C) ​acid precipitation
D) ​dry deposition
E) ​wet deposition
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53
​Studies suggest that downwind of a large industrial area ____.

A) ​average annual precipitation can increase
B) ​higher surface temperatures are observed
C) ​pollutants are more concentrated than in the city
D) ​average annual precipitation can decrease
E) aerosols resulting from pollution inhibit heat transfer
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54
​To help reduce emissions that lead to acid precipitation, the United States implemented ____ by which companies that reduced their emissions could sell allowances to other companies that had yet to do so.

A) ​the Montreal Protocol
B) ​the Kyoto Protocol
C) ​the AQI
D) ​a "cap and trade" system
E) ​carbon offset program
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55
​In the northeastern United States, emissions of ____ are primarily responsible for acid precipitation.

A) ​benzene
B) ​sulfur dioxide
C) ​carbon monoxide
D) ​volatile organic compounds
E) ​CFCs
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56
​Radiation inversions are not generally important for air pollution layers because they ____.

A) ​form at night.
B) ​only last a few hours.
C) ​form in heavy wind.
D) ​are disturbed by precipitation.
E) ​cannot exist during the day.
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57
​Pollution is most severe when a ____.

A) ​cold upper-level low moves into a region.
B) ​warm front passes through the area.
C) ​large slow-moving anticyclone moves into an area.
D) ​storm system begins developing to the west.
E) ​cold front passes through the area.
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58
​Which condition would act to prevent a buildup of pollutants near the surface?

A) ​light surface winds
B) ​a strong subsidence inversion
C) ​a large, slow-moving anticyclone
D) ​a deep mixing layer and strong ventilation
E) ​a shallow mixing layer
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59
​A study conducted in St. Louis, Missouri, showed that precipitation amounts downwind from the city were ____ than ____.

A) ​less on Mondays; on Fridays
B) ​greater on weekdays; on weekends
C) ​greater on weekdays; on weekends
D) ​greater in spring; in fall
E) ​less in spring; fall
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60
​In cities, where less vegetation and exposed soil exists, the majority of the Sun's energy is absorbed by ____.

A) ​cloud cover
B) ​city parks
C) ​the greater number of people
D) ​buildings
E) ​urban structures and asphalt
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61
To indicate the air quality in a particular region, the EPA developed the____________________,which includes the pollutants carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide, particulate matter, and ozone.​
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62
In sunny cities such as Los Angeles, the ever-rising automobile population and the large petroleum processing plants generate ____________________smog, which irritates the eyes.
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63
O + H2O ----> OH + OH​
In the above reaction, the OH is called a(n)____________________because it contains an unpaired electron.
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64
​Since the____________________of 1970, emissions of most pollutants have fallen off substantially, with lead showing the greatest reduction, primarily due to the elimination of leaded gasoline.
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65
Ozone (O3) forms naturally in the____________________when atomic oxygen (O) combines with molecular oxygen (O2) in the presence of another molecule.​
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66
Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) represent a class of organic compounds that are mainly____________________, containing only hydrogen and carbon.
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67
Strong winds tend to____________________the concentration of pollutants by spreading them apart as they move downstream.​
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68
​The cost of damage to building surfaces, monuments, and other structures caused by acid deposition is estimated to run into the ____ of dollars each year.

A) ​thousands
B) ​hundreds of thousands
C) ​millions
D) ​billions
E) ​trillions
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69
The main component of photochemical smog is the gas____________________.​
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70
In the 1970s,____________________were the most widely used propellants in spray cans, such as deodorants and hairsprays.
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71
​Polar stratospheric clouds are thought to contribute to the problem of ____.

A) ​global warming
B) ​ozone destruction
C) ​acid rain
D) ​photochemical smog
E) ​radio wave interference
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72
____________________air pollutants enter the atmosphere directly-from smokestacks and tail pipes, for example.
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73
Many suspended particles are____________________,meaning that water vapor readily condenses onto them.
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74
​A coning shape exhibited by a smokestack plume is indicative of what type of condition(s)?

A) ​inversion only
B) ​stable only
C) ​neutral only
D) unstable only
E) ​both inversion and stable
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75
​A looping shape exhibited by a smokestack plume is indicative of ____ conditions.

A) ​inversion
B) ​stable
C) ​neutral
D) ​unstable
E) ​both inversion and stable
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76
Due to increased industrialization, by the 1850s, London had become notorious for its "pea soup" fog, which was a thick mixture of ____________________.
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77
​A fanning shape exhibited by a smokestack plume is indicative of ____ conditions.

A) ​inversion
B) ​stable
C) ​neutral
D) ​unstable
E) ​both inversion and stable
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78
The two primary nitrogen pollutants are nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and nitric oxide (NO), which, together, are commonly referred to as ____________________,or simply, oxides of nitrogen.​
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79
​The stability of the atmosphere is determined by the way the air temperature changes with height, which is called the____________________.
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80
The term___________________matter represents a group of solid particles and liquid droplets that are small enough to remain suspended in the air.​
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