Drinking and keeping our food supply alive is a use for the most common (80%) green house gas. That is water vapor.
The second most common greenhouse gas comes from anything that dies and rots, CO2. Man also produces 3 to 6% of this gas. The rest comes from natural sources.
The third most common gas is methane, which comes from animals. In this arena man produces much of this gas through the farming of animals. Almost 1% of this gas is made by humans.
In total man produces about 0.28% of all green house gas. Much of this amount from items that would produce it even if man were not around.
Greenhouse gases are naturally occurring gases but by increasing the concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere we are contributing to global warming.
Greenhouse gases trap heat in the Earth's atmosphere, leading to global warming and climate change. Burning fossil fuels releases greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions are essential in mitigating the impacts of climate change.
Greenhouse gases must have three atoms, so gases like hydrogen (H2) and Oxygen (O2) are not greenhouse gases.
The glass on the greenhouse stops temperature from leaving or entering like the gases do to the earth.The atmospheric gases are called 'greenhouse gases' based on the idea that the gases 'trap' heat like the walls of a greenhouse do
The greenhouse effect warms the gases in the atmosphere.
The greenhouse allowed them to have fresh vegetables all year long. They had to use a greenhouse to get the flowers to bloom. The greenhouse gases were warming the Earth.
Fuels release greenhouse gases. These gases can cause ozone depletion.
Greenhouse gases have had a significant impact on the environment.
Yes. The greenhouse gases trap the sun's heat.
Greenhouse gases keep the earth warm.Too much greenhouse gas is causing global warming.
Water vapor, carbon dioxide, methane, ozone and nitrous oxide. They are known as 'greenhouse gases'.
Non-greenhouse gases are all gases except the greenhouse gases. Greenhouse gases are those that can absorb and emit infrared radiation.The most abundant greenhouse gases in Earth's atmosphere are:Water vapor (H2O)Carbon dioxide (CO2)Methane (CH4)Nitrous oxide (N2O)Ozone (O3)CFCs