Scientists found that natural bacteria can eat methane, cut climate pollution, and turn waste gas into useful materials.
Mangrove forests play an important role in the global carbon cycle, particularly within the marine carbon system. Growing ...
A new study combines drone data, satellite observations, and ground-based flux measurements to examine methane emissions from ...
Can methane flare burners be advanced to produce less methane? This is what a recent study published in Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research hopes to address as a team of researchers from the ...
Methane-eating microbes could help convert one of the most powerful greenhouse gases into useful ...
Seaweed washing onto sandy shores does more than rot. A new study found that it fuels oxygen-tolerant microorganisms that pump methane into the air, overturning a long-held scientific assumption about ...
As mighty glaciers melt in the Arctic, new research finds million-year-old methane gas trapped beneath the ice is surfacing, with a potential to further warm the planet. "Glacial retreat is the big ...
Heat-trapping methane may be best known for the dangers it poses to humans and Earth’s atmosphere, but in the dark depths of the ocean, the greenhouse gas is a nourishing meal for some of the world’s ...
Understanding the flammability limits and combustion characteristics of fuel–air mixtures is pivotal for both industrial safety and the advancement of energy technologies. These limits define the ...