you compress it to a high temperiture
There is no exact answer yet to this question. If we stopped producing carbon dioxide (CO2) now, the extra CO2 we have added to the atmosphere would probably stay there for many many years. The InterGovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in its 2007 report, talking about the increased levels of carbon dioxide, says, "About 50% of a CO2 increase will be removed from the atmosphere within 30 years, and a further 30% will be removed within a few centuries. The remaining 20% may stay in the atmosphere for many thousands of years." Read more at the link below.
Carbon dioxide (CO2) has the greatest effect on breathing as it regulates the body's respiratory drive. An increase in CO2 levels stimulates the need to breathe, while a decrease can cause breathing to slow or stop.
Entropy would decrease in the process represented by option C: CO2(g) → CO2(l). In this transition, gaseous CO2, which has higher disorder and randomness, condenses into liquid CO2, resulting in a more ordered state and a decrease in entropy. The other options involve processes that either maintain or increase entropy.
Gasses are compressible and liquids and solids are incompressible. Using this information one can surmise that CO2 compressible would be the gas phase of CO2 and CO2 incompressible would be the solid (dry ice) phase of CO2.
I assume you have the Holt, Rinehart and Winston worksheets.So your question was :'If the RuBP consumed in Step 1 was not regenerated in Step 4 of the Calvin Cycle, then,a. CO2 would stop diffusing into the stroma.b. the cycle would speed up because of an increase in CO2 molecules.c. the plant cell would lack G3P molecules.d. the plant cell would stop bonding carbon atoms from CO2 into organic compoundsThe two you can immediately cross out are A and B because diffusion of CO2 has nothing to do with RuBP. As for B, the cycle would not speed up. If anything, it would slow down or stop.Now, we are left with:c. the plant cell would lack G3P molecules.d. the plant cell would stop bonding carbon atoms from CO2 into organic compoundsThe article you read on the front sheet [I will not copy that down] never specified much on whether or not the cell would stop bonding carbon atoms from CO2 into organic compounds, so I personally settled for C. My reasoning behind this is that G3P is made from RuBP, and without it, the cell, like the answer states would lack G3P.TL;DR the answer is 'D'I do hope this helped. Good luck with Bio!Edit: answer is D
the first and fore most is to stop cutting trees, as when we give out carbon dioxide {CO2} the trees take co2. but when trees will not be there , co2 will be in the air.
During daylight hours, I believe. This is so they can photosynthesize which requires water, light and Co2. Obviosuly there is no light at night, so photosynthesiz will stop, therefore the plant will stop abosrbing Co2.
Foam padding with a blanket and a pillow.
Blast the engine with a CO2 only fire extinguisher. The CO2 will displace the O2 and "smother" the air it needs to run. The CO2 will leave no trace and dissipate.
No. There is no way of stopping volcanoes from releasing anything.
you breath out co2 so it doest matter stop worring and believe in god
'the rise in CO2 is horrid it could kill millions of humans and animals it could also make so many bio hazards , but we don't stop because CO2 is in the things we love like fizzy drinks.
Petrol cars produce CO2 as a combustion by-product, so it might be said that whatever the fastest car in the world is the fastest CO2 car. There are no cars powered by CO2 - obviously - as any chemical reaction starting with CO2 needs energy to produce another substance. There might be a car somewhere powered by compressed CO2, but this will stop moving when it runs out of pressure. Consequently the fastest CO2 car is a parked car.
if we stop deforestation by 50%, it will stop 500 billion tons of CO2 going to the atmosphere!!!
No, carbon dioxide (CO2) can not help to stop global warming. CO2 emissions are the main reason why global warming is happening, released by the burning of fossil fuels (coal, oil and natural gas) in industry, transport and the generation of electricity.
The brain and lungs continually use an O2-CO2 feedback mechanism. High CO2 in the body triggers us to breathe. High CO2 in the air, however, eventually cause us to stop breathing after period of deceased oxygen. This causes brain damage and can cause organ damage.
By using less water and reducing your footprint on CO2 emissions to stop global warming.