Fruits, vegetables, meats, cut grass, etc. all decay.
they hold in water,when they decay they realese peat into the enviroment
they hold in water,when they decay they realese peat into the enviroment
The falling and decay of plant material provides a compost that feeds and mulches the plants around.
Cardboard, egg shells, fruit peels, grass clippings, leaves and paper are six things that decay and that may be put in compost piles. Fruit peels and grass clippings decompose within six months while cardboard and leaves -- excepting beech and oak -- require 12 to 24 months. Egg shells take at least three years to decompose.
gamma decay beta decay alpha decay
I believe relative decay is the decay over time.
a plant needs photosynthesis to grow.and to do the photosynthesis process it needs sunlight and in winter there is not much sunlight..this is how plants get food ..i think that's the reason..hope this helped.. :) Close, but not close enough. Below is a more "scientific" answer. The temperature during the summer is warmer, and therefore much more suitable for the grass to grow than during the winter. During the winter, temperatures drop to 32 degrees Fahrenheit, which is the freezing point of water, or even lower than that. With the water in the blades of grass frozen, the grass cannot get the nutrients it requires to thrive, and thus dies.
The decay of radioactive isotopes.The decay of radioactive isotopes.The decay of radioactive isotopes.The decay of radioactive isotopes.
The natural isotope 227Ac decay: - by beta minus decay: to 227Th - by alpha decay: to 223Fr
Radium-226 does not decay by beta decay. It decays by alpha decay to radon-222.
The decay products of ununhexium (after alpha decay) are isotopes of ununquadium.