Your web browser (Safari 7) is out of date. For more security, comfort and the best experience on this site: Update your browser Ignore Encyclopedic Entry
air pollution For the complete encyclopedic entry with media resources, visit: http://nationalgeographic.org/encyclopedia/air-pollution/ Air pollution consists of chemicals or particles in the air that can harm the health of humans, animals, and plants. It also damages buildings. Pollutants in the air take many forms. They can be gases, solid particles, or liquid droplets. Sources of Air Pollution Pollution enters the Earth's atmosphere in many different ways. Most air pollution is created by people, taking the form of emissions from factories, cars, planes, or aerosol cans. Second-hand cigarette smoke is also considered air pollution. These man-made sources of pollution are called anthropogenic sources. Some types of air pollution, such as smoke from wildfires or ash from volcanoes, occur naturally. These are called natural sources. Air pollution is most common in large cities where emissions from many different sources are concentrated. Sometimes, mountains or tall buildings prevent air pollution from spreading out. This air pollution often appears as a cloud making the air murky. It is called smog. The word "smog" comes from combining the words "smoke" and "fog." Large cities in poor and developing nations tend to have more air pollution than cities in developed nations. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), some of the worlds most polluted cities are Karachi, Pakistan; New Delhi, India; Beijing, China; Lima, Peru; and Cairo, Egypt. However, many developed nations also have air pollution problems. Los Angeles, California, is nicknamed Smog City. Indoor Air Pollution 1 of 11
Air pollution is usually thought of as smoke from large factories or exhaust from vehicles. But there are many types of indoor air pollution as well. Heating a house by burning substances such as kerosene, wood, and coal can contaminate the air inside the house. Ash and smoke make breathing difficult, and they can stick to walls, food, and clothing. Naturally-occurring radon gas, a cancer-causing material, can also build up in homes. Radon is released through the surface of the Earth. Inexpensive systems installed by professionals can reduce radon levels. Some construction materials, including insulation, are also dangerous to people's health. In addition, ventilation, or air movement, in homes and rooms can lead to the spread of toxic mold. A single colony of mold may exist in a damp, cool place in a house, such as between walls. The mold's spores enter the air and spread throughout the house. People can become sick from breathing in the spores. Effects On Humans People experience a wide range of health effects from being exposed to air pollution. Effects can be broken down into short-term effects and long-term effects. Short-term effects, which are temporary, include illnesses such as pneumonia or bronchitis. They also include discomfort such as irritation to the nose, throat, eyes, or skin. Air pollution can also cause headaches, dizziness, and nausea. Bad smells made by factories, garbage, or sewer systems are considered air pollution, too. These odors are less serious but still unpleasant. Long-term effects of air pollution can last for years or for an entire lifetime. They can even lead to a person's death. Long-term health effects from air pollution include heart disease, lung cancer, and respiratory diseases such as emphysema. Air pollution can also cause long-term damage to people's nerves, brain, kidneys, liver, and other organs. Some scientists suspect air pollutants cause birth defects. Nearly 2.5 million people die worldwide each year from the effects of outdoor or indoor air pollution. 2 of 11
People react differently to different types of air pollution. Young children and older adults, whose immune systems tend to be weaker, are often more sensitive to pollution. Conditions such as asthma, heart disease, and lung disease can be made worse by exposure to air pollution. The length of exposure and amount and type of pollutants are also factors.
Effects On The Environment Like people, animals, and plants, entire ecosystems can suffer effects from air pollution. Haze, like smog, is a visible type of air pollution that obscures shapes and colors. Hazy air pollution can even muffle sounds. Air pollution particles eventually fall back to Earth. Air pollution can directly contaminate the surface of bodies of water and soil. This can kill crops or reduce their yield. It can kill young trees and other plants. Sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide particles in the air, can create acid rain when they mix with water and oxygen in the atmosphere. These air pollutants come mostly from coal-fired power plants and motor vehicles. When acid rain falls to Earth, it damages plants by changing soil composition; degrades water quality in rivers, lakes and streams; damages crops; and can cause buildings and monuments to decay. Like humans, animals can suffer health effects from exposure to air pollution. Birth defects, diseases, and lower reproductive rates have all been attributed to air pollution. Global Warming Global warming is an environmental phenomenon caused by natural and anthropogenic air pollution. It refers to rising air and ocean temperatures around the world. This temperature rise is at least partially caused by an increase in the amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. Greenhouse gases trap heat energy in the Earths atmosphere. (Usually, more of Earths heat escapes into space.) 3 of 11
Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas that has had the biggest effect on global warming. Carbon dioxide is emitted into the atmosphere by burning fossil fuels (coal, gasoline, and natural gas). Humans have come to rely on fossil fuels to power cars and planes, heat homes, and run factories. Doing these things pollutes the air with carbon dioxide. Other greenhouse gases emitted by natural and artificial sources also include methane, nitrous oxide, and fluorinated gases. Methane is a major emission from coal plants and agricultural processes. Nitrous oxide is a common emission from industrial factories, agriculture, and the burning of fossil fuels in cars. Fluorinated gases, such as hydrofluorocarbons, are emitted by industry. Fluorinated gases are often used instead of gases such as chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs). CFCs have been outlawed in many places because they deplete the ozone layer. Worldwide, many countries have taken steps to reduce or limit greenhouse gas emissions to combat global warming. The Kyoto Protocol, first adopted in Kyoto, Japan, in 1997, is an agreement between 183 countries that they will work to reduce their carbon dioxide emissions. The United States has not signed that treaty. Regulation In addition to the international Kyoto Protocol, most developed nations have adopted laws to regulate emissions and reduce air pollution. In the United States, debate is under way about a system called cap and trade to limit emissions. This system would cap, or place a limit, on the amount of pollution a company is allowed. Companies that exceeded their cap would have to pay. Companies that polluted less than their cap could trade or sell their remaining pollution allowance to other companies. Cap and trade would essentially pay companies to limit pollution. In 2006 the World Health Organization issued new Air Quality Guidelines. The WHOs guidelines are tougher than most individual countries existing guidelines. The WHO guidelines aim to reduce air pollution-related deaths by 15 percent a year. Reduction 4 of 11
Anybody can take steps to reduce air pollution. Millions of people every day make simple changes in their lives to do this. Taking public transportation instead of driving a car, or riding a bike instead of traveling in carbon dioxide-emitting vehicles are a couple of ways to reduce air pollution. Avoiding aerosol cans, recycling yard trimmings instead of burning them, and not smoking cigarettes are others.
Vocabulary Term acid rain
Part of Speech noun
Definition precipitation with high levels of nitric and sulfuric acids. Acid rain can be manmade or occur naturally.
noun
container of liquid material under high pressure. When released through a small opening, the liquid
air pollution
noun
becomes a spray or foam. harmful chemicals in the atmosphere.
anthropogenic source
noun
caused by people.
asthma
noun
atmosphere
noun
disease that makes it difficult to breathe. layers of gases surrounding a planet or other celestial
attribute
verb
birth defect
noun
bronchitis
noun
cancer
noun
growth of abnormal cells in the body. system for reducing air pollution by placing limits on
cap and trade
noun
how much companies can pollute without having to pay for it.
aerosol can
carbon dioxide
chemical
noun
noun
body. to think to be caused by. physical disorder present at birth and not developed later. irritation of the main air passages to the lungs.
greenhouse gas produced by animals during respiration and used by plants during photosynthesis. Carbon dioxide is also the byproduct of burning fossil fuels. molecular properties of a substance.
5 of 11
Term
Part of Speech
chlorofluorocarbon noun (CFC)
Definition chemical compound mostly used in refrigerants and flame-retardants. Some CFCs have destructive effects
cigarette
noun
on the ozone layer. thin roll of tobacco for smoking.
coal
noun
dark, solid fossil fuel mined from the earth.
coal-fired power plant
noun
power plant that makes electricity by burning coal.
colony combat
noun verb
network of mold cells considered as one organism. to fight.
concentrated consider
adjectiveitems gathered closely together in one place. verb to think about.
contaminate crop
verb noun
to poison or make hazardous. agricultural produce.
current
noun
steady, predictable flow of fluid within a larger body of that fluid.
decade decay
noun verb
10 years. to rot or decompose.
degrade
verb
to lower the quality of something.
developed country noun
a nation that has high levels of economic activity, health care, and education.
developing world noun
nations with low per-capita income, little infrastructure, and a small middle class.
downwind
emission
adjectivein the direction of the wind. person who was accidentally exposed to radioactive noun particles from the Nevada Test Site. community and interactions of living and nonliving noun things in an area. noun discharge or release.
emit emphysema exceed
verb noun verb
exhaust
noun
factory
noun
downwinder ecosystem
to give off or send out. disease of the lungs. to go beyond the limit. gases and particles expelled from an engine. one or more buildings used for the manufacture of a product. 6 of 11
Term
Part of Speech
fluorinate fog
verb noun
fossil fuel
noun
garbage
noun
gas
noun
gasoline
noun
global warming
noun
greenhouse gas
noun
haze
noun
heart disease
noun
hydrofluorocarbon noun illness
noun
immune system
noun
incident indoor air
noun
pollution insulation irritation
noun noun noun
kerosene
noun
kidney
noun
Kyoto Protocol
noun
Definition to add or combine with the element fluorine (F). clouds at ground level. coal, oil, or natural gas. Fossil fuels formed from the remains of ancient plants and animals. trash or waste material. state of matter with no fixed shape that will fill any container uniformly. Gas molecules are in constant, random motion. liquid mixture made from oil and used to run many motor vehicles. increase in the average temperature of the Earth's air and oceans. gas in the atmosphere, such as carbon dioxide, methane, water vapor, and ozone, that absorbs solar heat reflected by the surface of the Earth, warming the atmosphere. group of solid and liquid particles in the air that makes it difficult to see. illness affecting the heart and circulatory system. greenhouse gas often used as an industrial cooling material. disease or sickness. network of chemicals and organs that protects the body from disease. event or happening. harmful chemicals coming from or accumulating inside a building. material used to keep an object warm. condition of unpleasant sensitivity. flammable liquid used as fuel. organ that removes the waste products from blood and helps regulate general health. (1997) international agreement to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. 7 of 11
Term liquid
Part of Speech noun
liver
noun
London Fog of 1952
noun
long-term effects noun lung man-made
noun noun
methane
noun
mold
noun
motor vehicle
noun
mountain
noun
natural gas
noun
natural source nausea
noun noun
nerve
noun
Nevada Test Site
noun
nitrogen oxide
noun
nitrous oxide
noun
Definition state of matter with no fixed shape and molecules that remain loosely bound with each other. organ that removes toxins from the blood, converts sugar to glycogen, and produces bile needed for digestion. (December 5December 9, 1952) severe smog that killed between 4,000 and 12,000 people in London, England. Also called the Great Smog. results of an incident or behavior that last for years or a lifetime. organ in an animal that is necessary for breathing. produced by people. chemical compound that is the basic ingredient of natural gas. type of fungi that forms on the surface of materials. method of transportation that is run by an electric or gas engine. landmass that forms as tectonic plates interact with each other. type of fossil fuel made up mostly of the gas methane. caused by nature or the environment. impulse to vomit. part of the nervous system that registers sensation and touch. testing site for nuclear weapons and other military products in the southern Nevada desert. Nuclear weapons testing was discontinued there in 1992. one of many chemical compounds made of different combinations of nitrogen and oxygen. greenhouse gas used in medicine and the manufacture of rockets. Also known as laughing gas or happy gas.
8 of 11
Term
Part of Speech
nuclear weapon
noun
obscure
verb
odor
noun
oxygen
noun
ozone layer
noun
particle phenomenon pneumonia
noun noun noun
pollutant
noun
public transportation
noun
Radiation Exposure noun Compensation Act
Definition explosive device that draws power from the splitting and combining of atomic nuclei. to darken or partially block. smell. chemical element with the symbol O, whose gas form is 21% of the Earth's atmosphere. layer in the atmosphere containing the gas ozone, which absorbs most of the sun's ultraviolet radiation. small piece of material. an unusual act or occurrence. infection where lungs fill with fluid. chemical or other substance that harms a natural resource. methods of movement that are available to all community members for a fee, and which follow a fixed route and schedule: buses, subways, trains and ferries. (1990) law providing money to people who developed
noun
cancer as a result of exposure to radiation in the atmosphere near nuclear test sites. atom or part of an atom with excess energy that decays and changes the properties of the atom. Also
radon
noun
called a hot particle. chemical element with the symbol Rn.
recycle
verb
reduce
verb
regulate
verb
rely
verb
radioactive particle
reproductive rate noun respiratory disease
noun
to clean or process in order to make suitable for reuse. to lower or lessen. to determine and administer a set of rules for an activity. to depend on. number of live offspring produced by a single female per reproductive cycle, usually a year. illness having to do with the lungs and breathing. 9 of 11
Term sewer system
Part of Definition Speech noun network of drains disposing liquid and solid waste.
short-term effect noun
results of an incident or behavior that last days or months and do not return. type of air pollution common in manufacturing areas or areas with high traffic.
smog
noun
smoke
noun
soil
noun
soil composition
noun
solid
noun
spore sulfur dioxide
noun noun
temperature
noun
temporary
adjectivenot lasting or permanent. airborne particles released by mold (not the mold noun itself) that can cause health problems for people and
toxic mold treaty unpleasant ventilation volcanic ash volcano
wildfire World Health Organization (WHO) yard
gases given off by a burning substance. top layer of the Earth's surface where plants can grow. material, including chemicals, air, and moisture, that make up a section of earth. state of matter with a fixed shape and molecules that vibrate but do not move. reproductive unit of some organisms. greenhouse gas that can cause acid rain. degree of hotness or coldness measured by a thermometer with a numerical scale.
animals. noun official agreement between groups of people. adjectiveoffensive or foul. movement or circulation of fresh air in a closed noun environment. Also called air circulation. noun fragments of lava less than 2 millimeters across. an opening in the Earth's crust, through which lava, noun ash, and gases erupt, and also the cone built by
noun
eruptions. uncontrolled fire that happens in a rural or sparsely populated area.
noun
United Nations agency responsible for health.
noun
land surrounding a house or building. 10 of 11
Term
yard trimmings
Part of
Definition
Speech noun
grass, leaves, and small branches left over from mowing and cutting back local vegetation. Also called yard waste. to produce or result in.
yield verb Maps AIRNow: Tracking Ozone and Particle Pollution
Websites Environmental Protection Agency: Indoor Air Pollution—Volatile Organic Compounds National Geographic Environment: Air Pollution National Geographic Environment: Global Warming EPA: Air and Radiation
© 1996–2017 National Geographic Society. All rights reserved.
11 of 11