be in terms of ingredients in so-called "chemtrails" : aluminum, barium, strontium and other chemicals, all of which have only one purpose: to either poison, eradicate or dumb down humanity. There is a much more obvious event in which tons of these chemicals are thrown into the air, not even at a height of several kilometers, but so close that they usually fall down where they were released: fireworks!
The chemistry of fireworks
Essentially, an exploding fireworks rocket is a series of chemical reactions occurring simultaneously or in rapid succession. The heat gives a rocket activation energy, which starts the chemical reactions within the rocket.
The solid chemical compounds in the rocket react with the heat with the oxygen in the air, burning and transforming, releasing smoke and exhaust gases such as carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide and nitrogen.
How are the colors created in fireworks?
Different chemicals and metals create the many different effects. The contents of rockets, firecrackers and other effect material for New Year's Eve are listed here:
aluminum
- produces silver and white flames and sparks, commonly found in sparklers
antimony
- is not a Pokémon, but creates glitter effects
barium
- Chemtrails could actually be so clear: Barium is responsible for green colors
calcium
- Breathe in deeply, because calcium is healthy and also produces orange colors
carbon
- Doesn't produce any color at all, but is essential for fireworks because it is the main component of black powder
chlorine
- is a component of many oxidizing agents in the rockets, and the metal salts often also contain chlorine
copper
- should actually be in chemtrails because it creates blue color... so it's great for creating “invisible chemtrails”.
iron
- also produces sparks, with the heat determining the color of the sparks
lithium
- Lithium carbonate is common, which makes it pop red
magnesium
- is really blinding because it produces a very bright white when burned
phosphorus
- It is known from glow sticks, but is used as a component of the fuel in fireworks because it reacts spontaneously with oxygen and burns
sodium
- The sky becomes golden when sodium burns, gold and yellow, often very bright colors
sulfur
- You can easily recognize it by its smell and is part of black powder
strontium
- stabilizes the chemical mixtures and also pops red
zinc
- Doesn't do anything except annoy asthmatics because it produces a lot of smoke
There are also other chemicals and heavy metals in fireworks. Even more toxic substances such as rubidium and cadmium were used in the past, but are no longer used today, at least in this country.
However, lists of pyrotechnic chemicals still contain substances such as various lead compounds, chlorates and mercury, which can often be found in home-made fireworks or fireworks imported from China.
The fine dust
All these pretty chemicals are found in the smoke produced by fireworks and form a hodgepodge of toxic dust, also known as fine dust. Fine dust is ideal for getting directly into the lungs when inhaled and settling there... there's really no better way to poison yourself than to breathe in deeply during a large fireworks display.
Conclusion
The noise from fireworks is bad enough, especially for animals and let's not even start with the emergency rooms where drunk people end up trying to shoot rockets between their buttocks
In addition to air and water pollution, we also have another big problem: lung pollution. And that doesn't require any conspiracy talk about chemtrails.
Sources:
Backcountry Attitude
ThoughtCo
EarthSky
ExplainThatStuff
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