It is unlikely the Earth will run out of oxygen as long as there is an adequate amount of plant life and animals. Animals produce oxygen from the CO2 animals emit and vice versa.
No, we will never run out of helium. Helium is a renewable resource from the periodic table of elements - just like hydrogen, oxygen and carbon.
It is a byproduct of the life processes on Earth. Earth's early atmosphere contained no Oxygen, but Earth was slowly Terra-formed by life and obtained an Oxygen rich atmosphere.
Alkali earth metals react with oxygen to form basic oxides.
Oxygen, Nitrogen and Carbon dioxide, in that order. The most important element to sustaining life is Oxygen.
It is unlikely the Earth will run out of oxygen as long as there is an adequate amount of plant life and animals. Animals produce oxygen from the CO2 animals emit and vice versa.
Yes. Spacecraft have must either go on short missions or be periodically resupplied from Earth.
If we cut down all the tree's it could. Tree's recycle carbon dioxide and turn it into oxygen.
You can not eliminate the oxygen sensors if you ever want the engine to run properly.
Oxygen on earth has not run out because green plants release oxygen into the air by a process called photosynthesis. Photosynthesis offsets oxygen consumption by other processes such as respiration, combustion, oxidation, etc. This is why protecting greenspaces is vital; without them the earth's oxygen would eventually be depleted.
1 year
No, we will never run out of helium. Helium is a renewable resource from the periodic table of elements - just like hydrogen, oxygen and carbon.
Oxygen is main gas of earth. If there is no oxygen in the earth all the life in the earth should die.
we get oxygen from the trees
Earth's atmosphere, including the oxygen, is bound to Earth by gravity.
The earth would eventually run out of oxygen. All animals would eventually die.
There is oxygen and gravitational force on earth but there is no oxygen and gravitational force