Sentences with phrase «much oxygen there»

Shapley said that prior to Sanders» discovery, researchers didn't know if they could measure how much oxygen there was in these distant galaxies.
It's not likely that anybody is going to be able to transport that much oxygen there to start the fire.
They have a little bit too much oxygen there.

Not exact matches

As for mold, sometimes it can form on the top of the batch if there is too much space (oxygen) at the top of the jar.
For teams coming from low - lying areas, it can be quite an ordeal playing a full 90 minutes when there is much less oxygen available than they are used to.
For a moment I thought about asking Chris to describe where we were on the road, and how much longer it would take to get there, but instead decided to focus on deep breathing, and getting as much oxygen in me, to Silas, as possible.
There are risks to delivering a full term breech baby, Including a prolapsed umbilical cord, oxygen deprivation, the baby's head getting stuck since the bottom is softer and may not dilate the cervix as much as it should, as well as possible injury to the baby's brain and skull.
«In debating the question in the coming years we must remember that there is only so much oxygen in the room.
Other places it is much harder to detect, either oxygen is decreasing slowly or there is so much [natural] variation.
Oxygen from seawater permeated only the upper millimeter or so of sediment, but the researchers noticed something happening much deeper in the mud, more than a centimeter below, as if oxygen were available down there, asOxygen from seawater permeated only the upper millimeter or so of sediment, but the researchers noticed something happening much deeper in the mud, more than a centimeter below, as if oxygen were available down there, asoxygen were available down there, as well.
«There wouldn't be much oxygen, so they were preserved instead of rotting away,» says Roger Anderson, a researcher at the Lamont - Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University.
If there were too much UV light, no water could survive on the surface because the water molecules would break up and escape through the top of the atmosphere as hydrogen and oxygen gas.
After they die, their detritus slowly sinks from the surface to the sea floor, and there is a layer in the water column, the OMZ, where microbes consume much of the detritus, a process that depletes oxygen through bacterial respiration.
Today there is so much of the planet's carbon stored in underground rocks that can not be released and react with oxygen.
With an atmosphere of much less than one percent oxygen, scientists have presumed that there were things living in deep water in the mud that didn't need sunlight or oxygen, but Czaja says experts didn't have any direct evidence for them until now.
The 2.52 billion - year - old sulfur - oxidizing bacteria are described by Czaja as exceptionally large, spherical - shaped, smooth - walled microscopic structures much larger than most modern bacteria, but similar to some modern single - celled organisms that live in deepwater sulfur - rich ocean settings today, where even now there are almost no traces of oxygen.
And when humans do finally return, they will know much more about the risks and resources there — particularly where to find water that could be used to make fuel for rockets and oxygen to breathe.
By calculating the number of these elements relative to oxygen, the researchers were able to predict how much oxygen should be in the atmosphere of the white dwarf — but they found significantly more oxygen than if there were only rocks.
According to Cain, basically it would require half as much oxygen as there is hydrogen in Jupiter's atmosphere.
But, more than this, the body senses that there is too much carbon dioxide and not enough oxygen (not because there is not enough AIR, but because the carbon dioxide was not exhaled and the chemical ratio is off).
Again, glycine molecules are larger than oxygen, so there's less magnesium by weight, but the gut is much more able to absorb it.
EPOC (excess - post exercise oxygen consumption)- It may not be much but it is there.
When fascia is allowed to release from muscle, much like opening a vacuum - sealed bag, there is more room for waste removal (lactate clearance) and oxygen delivery while the muscle itself begins to relax.
If there's a really strong part, it won't develop much until the weaker parts (that were constraining oxygen flow) catch up.
Boric acid contains Boron, Oxygen and Hydrogen while Borax (also known as sodium borate, or sodium tetraborate) contains two Sodium (Na) molecules which we really don't need as there is already too much sodium in our diet and sodium contributes to high blood pressure.
The script by William Nicholson and Simon Beaufoy does an acceptable job balancing the plot between the climbers, the people coordinating rescue efforts back at base camp, and the families left behind, and Mick Audsley's editing hangs together well, though it gets hard to keep track of characters because there are a lot of them and their faces are covered by oxygen masks for much of the second half.
There wasn't much the paramedics could do: IV fluids, oxygen, and some gentle compression around the bullet's point of entry.
If the pond contains fish, there can never be too much oxygen.
Because human oxygen masks do not fit pets, there's not much first responders can do to reverse the effects of smoke inhalation.
And yes, you could step back and say there's not much of a difference between our carbon binge and that oxygen outburst.
I'm on about: to point and prove to people with common sense that: CO2 doesn't make any greenhouse effect — it's all 100 % con / doesn't prevent cooling — O&N are regulating the temp — there is much more of oxygen & nitrogen in the troposphere and always will be!!!
So because the Earth was much warmer many millions of years ago and the Earth's climate has naturally changed due to asteroid impact, volcanic eruptions, changes in the solar flux, the emergence of plants which produced ~ 20 % oxygen content in the air and which in turn allowed animals to evolve, there's just no way that 7 billion humans can cause any problem at all.
Stefanthedeiner STD > I'm on about: to point and prove to people with common sense that: CO2 doesn't make any greenhouse effect — it's all 100 % con / doesn't prevent cooling — O&N are regulating the temp — there is much more of oxygen & nitrogen in the troposphere and always will be!!!
«Oxygen loss» sounds alarming, but fortunately there is much, much more oxygen in our atmosphere than carbon diOxygen loss» sounds alarming, but fortunately there is much, much more oxygen in our atmosphere than carbon dioxygen in our atmosphere than carbon dioxide.
He went without oxygen for a long time before intubation, and the doctors did not hold out much hope of survival, and if he did survive, they thought there would be brain damage.
Deepwater Horizon reduced oxygen levels in the sea 30 % (there was that much hydrocarbon to CO2 conversion by bacteria).
It also appears that there are decreasing rates of bottom water formation; that means that oxygen input to the deep ocean is probably decreasing... is it possible that we could be pushing the global oceans towards a state where bottom water anoxia is much more prevalent?
Now, there's around four times as much nitrogen in the atmosphere as oxygen and since nitrogen in its diatomic form is difficult to break to form compounds, then it could be said to approximate to an ideal gas (elastic collisions not inelastic), and, oxygen and nitrogen don't combine in the atmosphere but mix, and, oxygen is practically the same weight as nitrogen, and, oxygen has practically the same heat capacity, then, not a bad approximation to the ideal gas of Jelbring's thought experiment.
If so, then you either disagree with the theory of combustion, that is, one atom of carbon burned in an excess of oxygen produces one molecule of CO2, or you believe there is some sort of vast conspirousy to make people think that much more fossil fuel has been burned than actually has been.
@Jimbo — If you really want to put it in perspective, until about 2 to 1-1/2 billion years ago, before photosynthesis by blue - green algae converted almost all of it to oxygen, the Earth's primordial atmosphere was about 20 percent CO2, about the same percentage as oxygen is today, and the Earth certainly didn't burn up them even with 500 times as much CO2 in the air as there is today.
The Guardian gives us a glimpse: Two separate scientists studying the issue have found the low - oxygen areas around the Gulf Gusher.Half as Much Methane Spewing Out as Oil Samantha Joye, from the University of Georgia, says there's up to 50 % as much methane and other gases being spewed from the wreckage of the Deepwater Horizon as there is Much Methane Spewing Out as Oil Samantha Joye, from the University of Georgia, says there's up to 50 % as much methane and other gases being spewed from the wreckage of the Deepwater Horizon as there is much methane and other gases being spewed from the wreckage of the Deepwater Horizon as there is oil.
The fact that there is so much CO2 actually serves to keep the planet cooler than it would be if there were a nitrogen / oxygen atmosphere there.
However, a recent study has found that there may be a much simpler way to discover if an infant is on the brink of brain damage as a result of oxygen loss.
Antennae and other equipment could be placed in the area of the contact lens outside the iris, but «there can't be too much stuff to block that [because] the oxygen permeation rate needs to be close to 100 percent,» he told TechNewsWorld.
There is also a new SpO2 sensor that should provide much fitness and health analytics by estimating the blood oxygen levels.
There's not much different from what I showed in my Oxygen OS review, but OnePlus has added a new «Shelf» side screen that will be home to your recently used apps and contacts.
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