No gas is "living" itself, but a few of them are necessary for some forms of life, and living things excrete some of them. Oxygen, carbon dioxide, hydrogen (since it forms water with oxygen), nitrogen, methane.
The investigation concluded that the gas likely did not originate from living things, as the chemical composition and isotopic signatures were inconsistent with biological sources. Instead, the data suggested that the gas was formed through geological processes. Further analysis ruled out organic contributions, reinforcing the idea that the gas was abiotic in nature.
No because the sun is made of gas and gas is not living so it is concluded that the sun is not living.
This depends on your definition of nature. One definiton is: Nature, in the broadest sense, is equivalent to the natural world, physical world, or material world. "Nature" refers to the phenomena of the physical world, and also to life in general. It ranges in scale from the subatomic to the cosmic. this definition suggests that nature has both living and non-living components (rocks and animals).
Only living things reproduce, and gas isn't living
In nature, Argon is a gas
No, gas is not a living thing. Gas consists of individual molecules or atoms that do not have biological functions or the ability to reproduce, grow, or respond to stimuli like living organisms.
oxygen gas
gas at STP
its made of gas
helium is a gas
natural gas is a nonrenewable fossil fuel
Yes because every living thing is nature.