Metal compounds are used since metals have characteristic flame colors. For example, potassium burns lilac, copper is blue/green, calcium is red. The colors are even used as a chemical test of identity. Check out the link for more info on what metals produce which color and for pictures of flame tests.
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Fireworks are different colors because of the chemicals used in the mixture. Different chemicals emit different colors when they burn. For example, strontium compounds produce red colors, while copper compounds produce blue and green colors. Mixing various chemicals in fireworks creates a colorful display when ignited.
Various types of flammable metals are responsible for the colors you see in fireworks. When the rocket runs out of solid fuel and explodes, it ignites small pieces of certain flammable metals packed together in the upper section, sending them flying in different directions in the process. Magnesium burns white, Sodium will burn yellow, Strontium and Lithium will burn red, etc.
Food coloring. You put the food coloring in the spark and it turns that color! woo! LOL
there are more than one but the only one i know is strontium nitrate. 99% that it will work and 1% that it wont.
You can add colors to fireworks by incorporating specific chemical compounds into the fireworks mixture. Each compound produces a different color when ignited. For example, strontium compounds produce red colors, copper compounds produce blue colors, and barium compounds produce green colors. By using a combination of these compounds at the right ratios, you can create a colorful fireworks display.
The element copper makes the blue-green fireworks.
Fireworks can come in a variety of colors, including red, blue, green, yellow, purple, orange, and white. These colors are achieved by adding different chemical compounds to the fireworks that produce different colored light when ignited.
Salt is used in fireworks to produce specific colored flames when it burns. Different salts produce different colors when ignited, creating the vibrant displays seen in fireworks.
Barium is the element that produces yellow-green fireworks. It is a highly reactive metal that is commonly used in fireworks to create vibrant green colors.