Zombie ipsum reversus ab viral inferno, nam rick grimes malum cerebro. De carne lumbering animata corpora quaeritis. Summus brains sit, morbo vel maleficia? De apocalypsi gorger omero undead survivor dictum mauris. Hi mindless mortuis soulless creaturas, imo
Zombie ipsum reversus ab viral inferno, nam rick grimes malum cerebro. De carne lumbering animata corpora quaeritis. Summus brains sit, morbo vel maleficia? De apocalypsi gorger omero undead survivor dictum mauris. Hi mindless mortuis soulless
Zombie ipsum reversus ab viral inferno, nam rick grimes malum cerebro. De carne lumbering animata corpora quaeritis. Summus brains sit, morbo vel maleficia? De apocalypsi gorger omero undead survivor dictum mauris. Hi mindless mortuis soulless creaturas, imo evil stalking monstra adventus resi dentevil vultus comedat cerebella
In response to the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill, responders flew 412 missions to apply nearly 100,000 gallons of chemical dispersants onto oil floating on the Gulf of Mexico.
Dispersants contain surfactants (detergents) that help break oil into smaller droplets and a solvent that enables the critical step of getting the oil, surfactants, and water to mix.
On cloudy days, the solvents effectively allow oil and water to mix, enabling surfactants to create small oil droplets that can more easily sink or be diluted in the ocean, eaten by microbes, or evaporated.
On sunny days, sunlight oxidizes oil into compounds that are only partially soluble in the solvent. This limits the ability of surfactants to interact with oil and break it into droplets. Consequently, less oil is dispersed into the ocean.