Concept: Greenhouse gases are gases in the atmosphere that absorb and emit infrared radiation (heat). This property causes the greenhouse effect, which warms the Earth's surface.
Step 1: Major Greenhouse Gases
The primary greenhouse gases in Earth's atmosphere are:
Water Vapor (\(\text{H}_2\text{O}\)): The most abundant greenhouse gas, responsible for a large part of the natural greenhouse effect.
Carbon Dioxide (\(\text{CO}_2\)): A major contributor, its concentration has significantly increased due to human activities (burning fossil fuels, deforestation).
Methane (\(\text{CH}_4\)): Produced by natural sources (wetlands) and human activities (agriculture, livestock, fossil fuel extraction). It is a potent greenhouse gas.
Nitrous Oxide (\(\text{N}_2\text{O}\)): Emitted from agricultural and industrial activities, as well as natural processes.
Ozone (\(\text{O}_3\)): In the troposphere (lower atmosphere), ozone acts as a greenhouse gas.
Fluorinated gases (e.g., HFCs, PFCs, \(SF_6\)): Synthetic, potent greenhouse gases.
Step 2: Analyzing the options
(1) Methane (\(\text{CH}_4\)): A significant greenhouse gas.
(2) Carbon-di-oxide (\(\text{CO}_2\)): The most discussed anthropogenic greenhouse gas.
(3) Carbon mono-oxide (\(\text{CO}\)): Carbon monoxide is not considered a {direct} greenhouse gas because it does not absorb terrestrial infrared radiation strongly itself. However, it is an {indirect} greenhouse gas because it reacts with hydroxyl radicals (OH) in the atmosphere. This reaction reduces the availability of OH radicals, which are important for removing other greenhouse gases like methane. So, CO can lead to an increase in the lifetime and concentration of methane. But directly, it's not a strong IR absorber.
(4) Ammonia (\(\text{NH}_3\)): Ammonia can absorb infrared radiation and act as a weak greenhouse gas. Its atmospheric lifetime is short, but it can contribute to the formation of particulate matter, which has complex effects on climate. In many contexts, especially introductory ones, it might not be listed as a primary greenhouse gas compared to \(CO_2, CH_4, N_2O\). The image indicates this option was circled.
Step 3: Identifying the one that is "not" a (direct) greenhouse gas
Comparing the options, Carbon Dioxide and Methane are definitely major direct greenhouse gases. Ammonia has some direct greenhouse effect. Carbon Monoxide has a very weak direct effect but a more significant indirect effect.
In typical lists focusing on direct major greenhouse gases, Carbon Monoxide (CO) is often the one considered "not a greenhouse gas" in the direct sense, or at least the least significant direct one among these options. If the question implies "not a significant direct greenhouse gas," then CO is the best fit.
Given the common understanding in introductory contexts, CO is the most likely answer for "not a greenhouse gas."