Both should be able to deliver to his Anaheim and Orlando homes. (Fixed -- I don't travel in that region enough to remember all the details)
Based on New Origins probe (that went to and past) Pluto, and some fast-and-loose math, about 600 tons of fuel need to be burned (in the atmosphere) to get a ton of stuff out there.
News to me, and perhaps appropriate to the 'level' of our recent discussion here, there is a scientific journal aimed for a quite young audience: Five Nobel Prize winners publish scientific a | EurekAlert! Frontiers for Young Minds: Science for kids, edited by kids Readers might test drive that on their young associates.
Continuing the fuel economy theme, it appears that 'shipping' to Mars requires only about 1/6 the fuel, compared to Pluto. Not very confident in that calculation - perhaps others see a clearer picture. ==edit I suppose New Origins needed enough velocity to escape Sun's gravity well completely, as it is still going. Only the third such? Throwing stuff at Mars only requires enough velocity to get gravitationally captured by Mars. And of course going to a correct spot. So it should have a much lower velocity requirement. Always learning here It may be that most Mars trippers move faster than that bare minimum, to save on travel time.
Actually there is new fun stuff coming out about sending people to Mars. That solar maximum activity would be a good time to go. That stuck me as counter intuitive because that is time of highest charged-particle flux from Sun, which biologicals would rather avoid. Explanation apparently is that solar magnetosphere is largest then, and it can provide some protection en route against galactic charged-particle fluxes. Which are even less friendly. Ecosystems within ecosystems
vanishing-switzerland-drapes-blankets-on-swiss-alps-to-protect-from-climate-change.html hey, why not?
Yes, they have financial interests here. That is not enough by itself to discard the analysis. People run the numbers for themselves and make some decisions. They might decide to not scuttle the coal scuttle. That's the fun of it.
'i assure you, they are post manufacturing waste' brought to you by the pellet stove manufacturers of america
They were until Europe didn't specify wood had to be post manufacturing waste to be counted as green.
This article claims US pellet production is 80% waste from other wood industries and 20% new cutting: Sustainability | Free Full-Text | Effects of Production of Woody Pellets in the Southeastern United States on the Sustainable Development Goals | HTML Audubon, Natl Resources Defense Council among others are 'heated' on this subject, mostly related to the Euro policy @Trollbait mentions. A consortium of Congo-forest countries are getting into pellet manufacture/export, possibly as a way to work around round-wood export bans.
When you put a stick in a wood stove, not all of it encounters optimal conditions of temperature and oxygen supply. So there are particulates, carbon monoxide, and thermal inefficiency. Pellet stoves demonstrably do combustion better, and are about as clean as wood burning can be I suppose. Also they are pretty much automatic, so end user does not need to know much about wood. Do not underestimate market value of dumbing down. They call it convenience Full carbon accounting of pellet manufacturing, and transport (to as far as Europe) may have been done. I don't know. But it won't improve the carbon picture. There is plenty of room for 'spin' by both sides. A matter of interest for me is whether all that underground stuff (mycorrhia etc.) happens as nicely in short-rotation forests (whatever the reason they are on short rotation) as it does where trees are less disturbed. I don't think that has been studied carefully.
Firewood end use far from its cutting site also aids in dispersal of forest pests, emerald ash borer, etc. If pellet factories are close to cutting sites, I suppose they avoid such problems. The subject has many aspects to consider. Makes it interesting.
... and by me. Adding a ductless minisplit heat pump to the main area of my house, to displace most of the original electric resistance, has been the greatest home energy-saving step I've ever done. And significantly better products are available now. But that article covered only space heat. The same should also be done with water heat. Switching from electric resistance to a heat pump water heater has been my second greatest energy savings. And much better products are available now. Next up ... heat pump clothes dryers. But they are still an emerging market, not yet mature enough to make a compelling case. I'm hoping for them to be ready for prime time within a handful of years. Much cleaner and better than the cordwood heat that I grew up with. (The farm's woodlot provides plenty of fuel, "free" except for the great labor and chainsaw maintenance & fuel needed to collect it.) We finally got rid of dad's wood furnace a half dozen years ago and replaced it with a ground source heat pump. Prior to my own heat pump, I had looked at a pellet stove to replace the wood stove I can no longer use during any Puget Sound air quality alerts, which are commonly issued preemptively now. But one of my requirements was an ability to use it during winter power failures. A demonstration project had proven that it was possible for a pellet stove to power itself (fan and pellet feed) with a thermoelectric generator in its exhaust path, but nobody commercialized it. My old dirty uncertified wood stove does work during power outages, and is needed only very rarely. Especially since building envelope improvements now allow this home to ride through longer outages before needing any alternate heat. But pellet stoves are still too dirty for widespread use in urban and large suburban areas. In those areas, reserve them for 'upgrades' to existing dirtier wood burners.