Bibliography

The author of this webpage is not nearly clever nor cool enough to have come up with all of this knowledge by themselves
(furthering the course of human knowledge and creativity does not occur in a perfect vacuum).

Feel free to check out these fine sources for further information.

  1. "Air Composition". Engineeringtoolbox.com. N.P., 2017. Web.

  2. Kotz, J.C., Treichel, P., Townsend, J.R, and Treichel, D.A. (2015). Chemistry and chemical reactivity. Stanford, CT: Cengage Learning.

  3. Knight, Randall Dewey. (2004) Physics for scientists and engineers with modern physics: a strategic approach San Fransico: Pearson/Addison Wesley.

  4. Beiser, Arthur. (1983). Modern technical physics. Menlo Park, California: Benjamin/Cummings Publishing Company.

  5. Cengel, Y.A., and Boles, M.A. (2008). Thermodynamics: an engineering approach. New York: McGraw-Hill.

  6. Hedge, A. (2015). Lecture notes for Design and Environmental Analysis lecture. archived at http://ergo.human.cornell.edu/studentdownloads/DEA3500notes/Thermal/thcondnotes.html

  7. Catling, D. and Zahnle, K. (2009) The planetary air leak. Scientific American.

  8. Fire Engineering (2009) Fire Engineering's Handbook for Firefighter I and II. Tulsa, OK: PennWell Corporation.

  9. National Fire Protection Association (2017). All about fire. http://www.nfpa.org/news-and-research/news-and-media/press-room/reporters-guide-to-fire-and-nfpa/all-about-fire


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