what state is amidon where you can see coal beds
yes
The average human can see a candlelight up to approximately a mile away.
Let's see, we burn here on earth.....
In a sense yes because if you see heat from the sun has caused things such as forest fires and grass to crisp. Take a piece of glass and try to have the sun beam on it and it will burn the grass which proves it is burning the Earth.
All of them. You can see the Big Dipper anywhere in the northern hemisphere.
where at Amidon can you see burning coal beds
Coal changes to ash, flames with heat coming out.
Yes, the burning of any hydrocarbon produces carbon dioxide. This equation illustrates the burning of a hydrocarbon.CH4 + 2O2 → CO2 + 2H2O + energyAs you can see carbon dioxide is produced along with water and energy.Yes burning coal or any carbon based fuel produces carbon dioxide.
Put wood inside instead of coal one day and see what happens. Size does not matter. If it is a large stove use large wood, if it is a small stove then use small wood.
Yes- and I like to add that it is a very serious problem. Also, burning natural gas does contribute to global warming. See fossil fuels under wikipedia.
It is related to the black-body effect, where an object appears black (it absorbs the full visible spectrum of light) at room temperature but it starts emitting visible light when its temperature is rising (the coal is burning). The hotter the lump of coal, the more the light you see will be toward UV, unless the coal is consumed.
It releases CO2 into the air (CO2 is carbon dioxide) which destroys the Ozone layer
conserve coal to see the brighter earth
== == Natural gas is the cleanest. It produces the least amount of carbon dioxide per unit of energy released than the other fossil fuels like coal and oil. To get the same amount of heat, natural gas produces 30% less CO2 than burning oil, and about 45% less than burning coal.
Most feather beds rarely shed, you'll only see a feather or two a week.
along river beds, rocks, etc :)
Coal is a solid becuase we can see coal and we can feel it its hard and black.