it is methane
Methane
The gas that comes from under the North Sea and burns with a blue flame is methane (natural gas). Methane is a commonly extracted gas from offshore platforms in the North Sea and is used for fuel and heating purposes. Its blue flame is characteristic of its clean combustion.
It is obivously nitrogen, would wouldnt know that simple question
The bunsen burner doesn't come from the North Sea. In the United Kingdom, the mains gas supply is natural gas which largely comes from the wells in the North Sea, so we call it North Sea gas. Before we changed to that supply in the 1970's we used coal gas which needed a different admixture of air so all our bunsens had to be converted.
Domestic gas in the UK comes from the North Sea. This either comes directly from English or Scottish sources or from Norway via an undersea pipeline.
wind turbines,coal,etc
The North Sea
No. No source of stored gas is renewable.
the gas that comes from under the sea is .... methane.the gas in gas taps is .... methanethe gas burns on a blue flame if there is plenty of air is .... methane
The gas you are referring to is likely natural gas, which is a fossil fuel found beneath the Earth's surface. When burned with sufficient oxygen, natural gas produces a blue flame due to complete combustion. It is commonly used for heating, cooking, and electricity generation due to its relatively clean burning properties.
The British get their gas mostly from pockets beneath the North Sea. The supply from the North Sea is now dwindling and the British are now importing more and more of their gas from the middle east.
prevailing wind means where the wind comes from which is the north west of the sea