News
10h
IFLScience on MSN"This Is Illegal": NASA Reportedly Ordered To Destroy Important OCO SatelliteThe satellite is fully functional, providing valuable data, and may soon be burned up in our atmosphere out of choice.
A new global study reveals that ancient carbon, once thought securely stored in soils and rocks, is leaking into the ...
The Orbiting Carbon Observatories have been a game-changer for agriculture and climate science. Now, NASA is under pressure ...
11h
The Daily Galaxy on MSNScientists Find Ancient Carbon Leaking Into the Atmosphere, Posing a Greater Climate ThreatA groundbreaking global study, recently published in Nature, reveals surprising findings about the state of ancient carbon ...
Chemically, carbon dioxide is incredibly simple – it is just one carbon atom linked with two oxygen atoms. Together they create a colorless gas that makes up just a tiny fraction of the Earth's ...
2d
ZME Science on MSNDinosaur Teeth Help Scientists Recreate the Air Dinosaurs Once BreathedMillions of years ago, long-necked sauropods and snarling Tyrannosaurs roamed a world thick with heat, teeming forests, and ...
The Canadian Press on MSN4d
Companies take concrete steps toward capturing revenues from carbon dioxideWith conversion, the chemical makeup of the gas is altered to make products like aviation fuel and fertilizer. At a smaller ...
The Trump administration is moving to shut down two NASA missions that monitor a potent greenhouse gas and plant health, ...
Carbon dioxide, or CO2, is a greenhouse gas that occurs naturally in the atmosphere. When carbon dioxide enters the atmosphere, it contributes to warming of the climate due to the greenhouse effect.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said the average carbon dioxide level for May was 419.13 parts per million. That's 1.82 parts per million higher than May 2020 and 50 per cent ...
Carbon dioxide is the leading "greenhouse gas," so named because their accumulation in the atmosphere can help trap heat from the sun, causing potentially dangerous warming of the planet.
Carbon dioxide emissions were 35 per cent higher in 2006 than in’90, a much faster growth rate than anticipated, researchers led by Josep G. Canadell, of Australia’s Commonwealth Scientific ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results