Gases
in sentence
405 examples of Gases in a sentence
So, we're talking about things like inflatable liners that can conform to the complex topological shape on the inside of a cave, foamed-in-place airlocks to deal with this complex topology, various ways of getting breathing
gases
made from the intrinsic materials of these bodies.
The cylinder is a vacuum chamber, devoid of all the
gases
in air.
Now, many of the people who participate in Earth Witness would focus on ecological problems, human-caused or otherwise, especially environmental crimes and significant sources of greenhouse
gases
and emissions.
Climate change is happening, the earth's atmosphere is warming, because of the increasing amount of greenhouse
gases
we keep releasing into the atmosphere.
See, decomposition releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, as well as other greenhouse
gases
such as methane and nitrous oxide, but it also releases all the nutrients we all need to survive.
And carbon that's not degrading fast is carbon that's not going back into the atmosphere as greenhouse
gases.
And when permafrost thaws and drains, it makes it possible for microbes to come in and rather quickly decompose all this carbon, with the potential to release hundreds of billions of metric tons of carbon into the atmosphere in the form of greenhouse
gases.
And this release of additional greenhouse
gases
into the atmosphere will only contribute to further warming that makes this predicament even worse, as it starts a self-reinforcing positive feedback loop that could go on and on and on, dramatically changing our climate future.
And for that, these two countries, these two powerful giants, must reduce their own greenhouse gases, control their pollution, and lead the fight.
And there's a phenomenon called Henry's law, that says
gases
will dissolve into a fluid in proportion to the partial pressures you're exposing them to.
The way you manage all these different
gases
and different gas supplies is this really high-tech, sophisticated gas block up on the front here, where it's easy to reach.
It's got the valves and knobs and things you need to inject the right
gases
at the right time.
And when we're talking about drawdown, we're talking about putting large volumes of greenhouses gases, particularly CO2, out of circulation.
So how might we go about drawing down greenhouse
gases
at a large scale?
You know, if we could cover nine percent of the world's ocean in seaweed farms, we could draw down the equivalent of all of the greenhouse
gases
we put up in any one year, more than 50 gigatons.
But half of the greenhouse
gases
that we've put into the atmosphere, we've put there in the last 30 years.
Seventy-five percent of greenhouse
gases
in New York City come from a building like this one, burning oil for heat.
I'm here to talk about a related aspect, on how our emissions of greenhouse
gases
from burning of fossil fuels is reducing the nutritional quality of our food.
They also modeled what would be the most effective interventions, and their conclusion was reducing our greenhouse gases: getting our greenhouse gas emissions down by mid-century so we don't have to worry so much about these consequences later in the century.
Enzymes may also offer some help in capturing greenhouse gases, such as carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide.
It's a parameter that says how much warmer does it get if you emit a certain amount of greenhouse
gases.
But, suppose that it had been the case that with the amount of greenhouse
gases
we emitted, instead of the temperature rising by, say, between three and 4.5 degrees by 2100, suppose it had been 15 degrees or 20 degrees.
When the diaphragm is relaxed, the CO2 is exhaled alongside a mix of oxygen and other
gases.
So today, we pump millions of tons of greenhouse
gases
into the air, we dump plastics, fertilizers and industrial waste into the rivers and oceans, and we cut down forests that absorb CO2.
We will pinpoint where these
gases
emanate from, because we can measure the gradient where it comes from, and there, we can direct the next mission to land right in that area.
We believe that in a one-hour flight we can rewrite the textbook on Mars by making high-resolution measurements of the atmosphere, looking for
gases
of biogenic origin, looking for
gases
of volcanic origin, studying the surface, studying the magnetism on the surface, which we don't understand, as well as about a dozen other areas.
H is for habitat destruction, including climate change forced by greenhouse
gases.
We have to cease all extra production of greenhouse gases, especially CO2, as soon as possible, otherwise, we're in deep, deep trouble.
And that is now what we're trying to do, and working with this large cities group to fight climate change, to negotiate huge, big, volume deals that will enable cities which generate 75 percent of the world's greenhouse gases, to drastically and quickly reduce greenhouse gas emissions in a way that is good economics.
For those of you who saw "An Inconvenient Truth," the most important slide in the Gore lecture is the last one, which shows here's where greenhouse
gases
are going if we don't do anything, here's where they could go.
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