water vapor
Yes, intense earthquakes or volcanic eruptions can damage gas lines, causing them to rupture and release gas. If the gas comes into contact with a spark or open flame, it can ignite and start major fires. Proper monitoring and maintenance of gas infrastructure is crucial in areas prone to seismic and volcanic activity.
Cream cheese.
carbon
Above the bubble-point pressure, the oil formation volume factor decreases. This is due to the expansion of gas released from the oil as pressure decreases, causing the volume of oil to increase for a given mass.
The natural gas market load factor is calculated by dividing the actual amount of natural gas consumed by customers within a specific time period by the total potential maximum capacity of natural gas consumption for that same period. This ratio helps to provide insights into the efficiency of natural gas usage and utilization rates within the market. The formula for calculating the load factor is: Load Factor = (Actual Gas Consumed / Maximum Potential Gas Consumption) * 100.
Water vapour is the largest by volume, but carbon dioxide is the major one causing global warming.
There are storms on Uranus. Because Uranus is composed almost entirely of gas, these storms are extremely violent.
The Hindenburg should have used helium gas instead of hydrogen gas. Helium is non-flammable, unlike hydrogen, which was a major factor contributing to the Hindenburg disaster.
Yes. They are called storms.
no
Uranus has storms but not volcanoes. Uranus is a gas giant, so there is no solid surface on which volcanoes might form.
There are:AvalanchesEarthquakesVolcanic EruptionsFloodsLimnic Eruptions - When gas (Co2) bursts from underneath the water sometimes causing TsunamisTsunamisBlizzardsHurricanes-(sometimes called cyclone storms or typhoons)DroughtsHailstormsHeatwavesTornadoesEpidemics (like the plague its an outbreak of diseases)FaminesSolar Flares (This is like when the sun farts. It can trigger change to the world sometimes causing a natural disaster)
There are:AvalanchesEarthquakesVolcanic EruptionsFloodsLimnic Eruptions - When gas (Co2) bursts from underneath the water sometimes causing TsunamisTsunamisBlizzardsHurricanes-(sometimes called cyclone storms or typhoons)DroughtsHailstormsHeatwavesTornadoesEpidemics (like the plague its an outbreak of diseases)FaminesSolar Flares (This is like when the sun farts. It can trigger change to the world sometimes causing a natural disaster)
It never was - Nitrogen is the "major gas".
Too much carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is causing global warming. The natural carbon cycle is overwhelmed and can't move out all the extra gas. The extra gas is turning the natural greenhouse effect into an accelerated greenhouse effect, which is causing global warming.
Yes, intense earthquakes or volcanic eruptions can damage gas lines, causing them to rupture and release gas. If the gas comes into contact with a spark or open flame, it can ignite and start major fires. Proper monitoring and maintenance of gas infrastructure is crucial in areas prone to seismic and volcanic activity.
Due to higher demand in summer, prices tend to go up. Also, accessibility of crude oil is a major factor.