Blue and red
Silver has a high thermal conductivity and is not easily oxidized at high temperatures, which prevents it from burning. Even when exposed to flames, silver typically melts or tarnishes instead of catching fire.
Yes, graphite can burn and produce flames when exposed to a high enough temperature.
The flame test for strontium - a strong red color.
No, the color of a flame is determined by the temperature at which a material burns. Blue flames are typically hotter than orange flames because they burn at a higher temperature.
That depends on what is being burned. paper for instance, burns at 451 degrees farenheir wheras things like coal burn with hotter flames.
Silver has a high thermal conductivity and is not easily oxidized at high temperatures, which prevents it from burning. Even when exposed to flames, silver typically melts or tarnishes instead of catching fire.
Yes, graphite can burn and produce flames when exposed to a high enough temperature.
Flames can appear blue when they burn very hot. The blue color is due to the presence of carbon and hydrogen molecules in the flame that emit blue light when they are heated to high temperatures.
No
When silicon is burned, it produces white or colorless flames. This is due to the high temperature at which silicon burns, causing the light emitted to appear as white or colorless.
yes flames is fast food because flames gives you heart burn
When you burn coal.
The hotter the flame, the less color (and light) given off. Bright, yellow flames are the result of carbon that has not been burned, where blue flames indicate a near total burning of the fuel. Other chemicals present in the wood can color flames- sometimes added for the appearance- red, yellow, blue, green.
They are shiny, silver, less malleable than alkali metals and they burn with bright flames. They also make strong bases (Opposite of acid).
because we burn the oil
to produce heat and burn materails
oxygen ( O2)