Assuming you mean "how much carbon dioxide is generated by the electricity consumption of a computer", you are actually asking a very complicated question.
In the first instance, you need to know what the energy consumption of your/the average computer is. This depends on a huge number of factors such as: how powerful the processor and graphics cards are, how many hard drives and optical drives it has and what kind of monitor it has and what size that is. Also, the consumption varies depending on whether the computer is under load (performing calculations and reading from or writing to hard drives or optical media). If you're not interested in accuracy, I would guess about 200W for a modest office machine rough average.
Next, it depends on how much CO2 is produced per unit of electricity from your supplier. This in turn depends on what sources are used to provide your energy. Coal and oil produce more CO2 than gas, nuclear and others. The calculation is likely to be very complex and require a lot of research. The answer could be in the region of 500g per KWh, but this could vary wildly depending on which country you are in.
So taking our two assumptions (0.2KW and 500g/KWh), we can very roughly estimate 100g of CO2 produced per hour of computer usage.
It costs very little to produce carbon dioxide as it is a byproduct of many industrial processes. The cost depends on the specific method used, but it is generally a small fraction of a cent to produce 9oz of carbon dioxide.
The amount of CO2 produced by playing a computer varies depending on factors such as the computer's energy consumption and the source of electricity. On average, playing a computer for an hour can generate around 0.15 kilograms of CO2. This can increase significantly if the computer is powered by fossil fuels.
22 grams of carbon dioxide contains 12 grams of carbon. This amount of carbon can combine with 32 grams of oxygen to form 44 grams of carbon dioxide.
Respiration (breathing) has no effect on the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Breathing is part of the carbon cycle. We take in carbon in our food and drink and we release it again when we breathe. If we eat too much, the extra carbon is stored in our bodies, making us fatter, in much the same way as a tree stores carbon in its wood as it grows.So breathing does not increase or decrease the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
Photosynthesis is the main process in the carbon cycle that decreases the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. During photosynthesis, plants take in carbon dioxide from the air and convert it into carbohydrates and oxygen. This helps to store carbon and reduce the overall concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
C + O2 -------> CO2 12g of carbon produces 44g of carbon dioxide 1kg of carbon will produce 3-67kg of carbon dioxide
On average 258.63g of Carbon Dioxide a day
Cars produce much more than houses.
Any automobile produces about 2 kilograms of carbon dioxide per liter of fuel consumed.
Typically 2.31 kg.
Yes. Your carbon footprint is the measure of how much carbon dioxide equivalent you, or any of your activities produce. A car burns petrol (gasoline) so its use has a carbon footprint.
The oceans are regarded as carbon dioxide sinks, not sources. This means they remove carbon dioxide, not produce it. Carbon dioxide dissolves from the air into ocean water. Once there it is removed by plankton and algae, by corals and mollusks in making shells, and by chemical action.
Yes, but at night. It make oxygen more than it does carbon dioxide though. ---- Plants, like animals, do have metabolisms by which energy is generated through the oxidation of sugar, which produces carbon dioxide. However, green plants consume much more carbon dioxide, in the process of photosynthesis, than they produce by means of their metabolism, and they produce much more oxygen than they consume.
No, it's the other way around. Plants intake Carbon dioxide and put out Oxygen. In the theory of how the world formed, this is how the atmosphere got to contain Oxygen, from plants spreading over the continents and producing Oxygen.
The amount of carbon dioxide produced by a gas stove depends on the type of fuel used and the efficiency of the stove. Burning 1 cubic foot of natural gas typically produces about 12 pounds of carbon dioxide. However, newer stoves are more efficient and produce less carbon dioxide compared to older models.
It costs very little to produce carbon dioxide as it is a byproduct of many industrial processes. The cost depends on the specific method used, but it is generally a small fraction of a cent to produce 9oz of carbon dioxide.
every 2,062 miles travelled accounts for 1 ton of Carbon Dioxide emissions per person.