Calima was one of the early movers in the liquids - rich corridor running through the Montney Basin, which is already one of the hottest shale plays in North America on the basis of its proven ability to produce
big volumes of gas at low cost.
Not exact matches
After the
big sell - off
of January 24 (which followed several days
of higher
volume selling), it may be time to lay off the
gas pedal with new trade entries for a while.
Rather, the culprit is typically wastewater disposal, where high
volumes of water extracted in oil and
gas operations is reinjected into deep basement rocks, where the
bigger and more dangerous faults lie.
ii) The respective absorption bands for each trace
gas will be exhausted long before the
volumes of those
gases in the atmosphere become
big enough to make a measurable difference to the overall density
of the atmosphere and the size
of the greenhouse effect which is density dependent.
If there's no radiation from the Sun, no heat capacity in the model planet, no mass
big enough to effect pressure changes («real» ideal
gases which don't have mass), nothing much is happening because there's no movement, (movement from the play
of hot and cold
volumes as hot
gases rise and cold sink, becoming less dense and gaining density), but,
The molecule will first use the heat energy in expansion and on cooling will again condense and sink because heavier, and it will cool when its heat expanded
volume flows to colder air which absorbs the heat, the internal kinetic energy
of vibration, which if strong enough will pass that heat to another colder (which is why visible light is not a thermal energy, it is not powerful enough to move a molecule
of matter into vibration, it takes the
bigger heat wave, longwave infrared, aka thermal infrared called that because it is the wavelength
of heat)-- that is how convective heating warms the fluid
gas air in a room, by circulation, in the rise and fall
of molecules as they expand and condense, not by heat energy propelling molecules to hit other molecules..
More Comments: The
biggest news
of the day was that the comment period for New York State's proposed
gas drilling guidance has been extended to January 11th due to the incredible
volume of comments, although this is still fewer than the 180 days that many environmentalists and public officials demanded.