In May 2015, researchers using NASA's Orbiting Carbon Observatory 2 (OCO - 2) found Yasur to be belching CO2 into the air at a rate of 42
kilotons per day, they reported on 14 December here at the annual meeting of the American Geophysical Union.
Not exact matches
In the real world, power does not mean that one can order other people around — power means force intensity, measured in units like watts
per square meter or equivalent 1
kiloton explosions (on the order of 10,000
per hurricane).
So if I understand the basic flow chart, the plant will suck in 80
kilotons of air
per second, cool it enough to cause the CO2 to precipitate out, and pump the 80
kilotons (minus 32 tons of CO2) of CO2 free air far enough away to prevent it from mixing with the intake.
Environmentalists everywhere should be getting loud about the issue of cryptocurrencies; right now, according to the Digiconomist, making them is creating 30,162
kilotons of CO2
per year, and using enough electricity to power 5,699,560 American households.