isotopic carbon dioxide News
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Picarro Launches 2000 Series Gas Analyzers, Setting New Standard for Performance and Ease of Use
SUNNYVALE, Calif. - Picarro, the maker of the world's highest precision and easiest to use gas analyzers, unveiled its new 2000 series analyzer platform to meet the needs of the world's most discriminating scientists. Across a wide range of applications including measurements of greenhouse gases, isotopic carbon dioxide and isotopic water and water vapor, Picarro has raised the bar even higher ...
By Picarro, Inc
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Picarro Announces 3x Performance Increase for Isotopic Carbon Dioxide Analysis Enabling Broad New Applications in Science and Research
Picarro, Inc., the world's leading provider of instruments for carbon and water cycle measurements, today announced a new carbon isotope analyzer with three times the precision and four times the stability of Picarro's current industry-leading isotopic CO2 instruments. With a performance specification of 0.1 per mil precision for 13C/12C ratio measurements in CO2 in a 5 minute measurement and ...
By Picarro, Inc
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Macaulay Institute chooses Enviro Technology’s Picarro for their international research
Leading Aberdeen based land-use research centre the Macaulay Institute has purchased two Picarro isotopic CO2 (Carbon Dioxide) analysers from Enviro Technology for its world-wide research programme. The analysers are being used for the Institute’s field campaigns, which look at the 13C isotope content of CO2 which leaves the soil surface. By measuring the 13C content researchers can tell ...
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Blending synthetic air to measure climate change
Scientists at the National Physical Laboratory (NPL) have produced a synthetic air reference standard which can be used to accurately measure levels of carbon dioxide and methane in the atmosphere. This will greatly help scientists contribute to our understanding of climate change. A paper published in Analytical Chemistry describes how researchers at NPL have created a synthetic gas standard ...
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Past presents warning on greater warming
If the distant past is anything to go by, then climate scientists may have under-estimated the hazards of greenhouse gases, and future global warming could be a lot worse than anybody thought. The calculation rests on two things. One is a detailed reconstruction of rising greenhouse gas concentrations and an interlude of dramatic warming 56 million years ago. The other involves an almost ...
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