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artificial plasma is formed by electric charges passing through gas
Natural gas is used as a heating fuel, as a fuel for motor vehicles, to run electrical generating plants, and as the base chemical to produce ammonium nitrate fertilizers.
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Natural gas is found in fossil fuels, in coal beds, as methane clathrates, and is created by methanogenic organisms in marshes, bogs, and landfills. It is an important fuel source, a major feedstock for fertilizers, and a potent greenhouse gas.
Ununoctium is an artificial radioactive element, first time prepared in 2006.
It is not the fertilizers themselves, but the process by which they are made. the way that fertilizers are enriched with nitrogen in factories. puts huge amounts of nitrous oxide into the air, which is a very potent greenhouse gas.
nitrogenThe Haber process converts nitrogen gas into nitrogen fertilizers that help plants grow.
Nitrogen.
spraying perfume is one such example! .......when spraying perfume,the scent of the perfume spread around the area!
try spraying poisonous gas
nitrogen
Earth
It depends on where you're spraying. If you're spraying outside, away from a power source, the gas sprayer is better. Inside, or near an electrical outlet, the electric sprayer is probably better. Gas sprayers can be built to higher GPM ratings though, so a gas pump might be better if you're running three guns off one sprayer or if your spraying a thick coating
it is the industry that produces gas , fertilizers, dyes etc
the gas that comes from there bottom, which is very smelly Spraying with an offensive odour.
Yes, when the pilot light is not lit. No spray.
It is all chemical-made in a laboratory. Its not like cow manure which is natural.Artificial fertilizers are those produced by the chemical industry, as opposed to the organic or mineral fertilizers. Not organic as in organic farming, but organic as in carbon-based animal or vegetal organism, like manure.For instance, the nitrogen in artificial fertilizers used to come from oil, it is now extracted mostly from natural gas and comes in liquid or dry powder/pellet forms, mixed with other substances, mostly phosphorus and phosphates, in different (NPK) ratios according to the culture you are growing.Pure chemical elements are easy to obtain in powder form, so artificial fertilizers also include other macronutrients such as calcium or magnesium, and micronutrients which are other mostly metallic elements, for instance boron, manganese and zinc, which are critical for the well-being of the plants, even though they are needed only in very small quantity.Artificial fertilizers include only the pure and bare essential elements, whereas these elements make up a minor part of organic fertilizers, where the carbon-based elements represent the major part and serve to form humus, an essential part of the living soil. This is the reason why artificial fertilizers are described as washing out the top-soil and encouraging erosion and pollution of the aquifers and water ways, especially after a hard rain. A soil with no humus to absorb the water will erode quickly. Most American agricultural soil countrywide has lost several feet of top soil over the last century, most of which now lies on the ocean floor.All forms of artificial fertilizers are prohibited in organic farming, which relies on a sustainable cultivation cycle, or, in the case of intensive organic farming, on external inputs that are supposedly local and as much sustainable as possible.Agriculture being artificial by definition, it is not always possible to avoid inputs from non-renewable sources, such as calcium mined from mineral deposits, but these are not artificial and therefore tolerated.Artificial fertilizers are those produced by the chemical industry, as opposed to the organic or mineral fertilizers. Not organic as in organic farming, but organic as in carbon-based animal or vegetal organism, like manure.For instance, the nitrogen in artificial fertilizers used to come from oil, it is now extracted mostly from natural gas and comes in liquid or dry powder/pellet forms, mixed with other substances, mostly phosphorus and phosphates, in different (NPK) ratios according to the culture you are growing.Pure chemical elements are easy to obtain in powder form, so artificial fertilizers also include other macronutrients such as calcium or magnesium, and micronutrients which are other mostly metallic elements, for instance boron, manganese and zinc, which are critical for the well-being of the plants, even though they are needed only in very small quantity.Artificial fertilizers include only the pure and bare essential elements, whereas these elements make up a minor part of organic fertilizers, where the carbon-based elements represent the major part and serve to form humus, an essential part of the living soil. This is the reason why artificial fertilizers are described as washing out the top-soil and encouraging erosion and pollution of the aquifers and water ways, especially after a hard rain. A soil with no humus to absorb the water will erode quickly. Most American agricultural soil countrywide has lost several feet of top soil over the last century, most of which now lies on the ocean floor.All forms of artificial fertilizers are prohibited in organic farming, which relies on a sustainable cultivation cycle, or, in the case of intensive organic farming, on external inputs that are supposedly local and as much sustainable as possible.Agriculture being artificial by definition, it is not always possible to avoid inputs from non-renewable sources, such as calcium mined from mineral deposits, but these are not artificial and therefore tolerated.