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No, coal fired plants send huge amounts of uranium oxides up their stacks.
We make cars that use a lot of gas and the gas pollutes the air. We use nuclear plants and the smoke from smoke stacks also pollutes the air.
It takes place in the chloroplasts, in the stacks of discs called thykaloids.
No, coal puts large amounts of uranium oxides into the atmosphere through its stacks.
No, coal puts large amounts of uranium oxides into the atmosphere through its stacks.
Chloroplast thylakoids in plants form stacks referred to as grana. Photosynthesis occurs here.
193,000,000/100 = 1,930,000 stacks. 193,000,000/100 = 1,930,000 stacks. 193,000,000/100 = 1,930,000 stacks. 193,000,000/100 = 1,930,000 stacks.
Usually the stack in a nuclear power plant is of smaller diameter as we go up from base to stack top. This is to increase the drift velocity of the exhaust to get out from the stack. It is a matter of fluid mechanics design.
granum are stacks of thylakoids. grana are several stacks of thylakoids. :)
No, they are actually giving off steam. The steam is a byproduct of the hot water from the turbines air cooling.
Thylakoid membranes are found only in the leaves of plants. They are organized in stacks of disks that are used during photosynthesis.
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