True, fire must have oxygen to burn.
An object that is able to catch fire in the presence of oxygen.
Yes, provided the fire is not too large and is not a chemical fire that can burn without air.
A substance's ability to burn is called its flammability. It refers to how easily a material catches fire and sustains combustion. Factors that influence flammability include the presence of flammable gases, liquids, or solids in the substance.
You can use the light from the sun
It means 'able to be lit on fire' and flammable means that a material or chemical has the abilty to catch fire.
Combustibility is a material's ability to burn in the presence of oxygen. It is determined by factors such as the material's composition, structure, and ignition temperature. Materials with higher combustibility are more prone to catching fire and sustaining a flame.
They get brighter because fire uses oxygen to burn. Fire needs oxygen heat and fuel. Without any of these you will have no fire. So blowing more oxygen into a fire will make it stronger.
A substance which has ability to burn is called combustible.
umm im not too sure but i think you may be looking for combustable material??
Oxygen does not distribute fire. Fire is a chemical reaction between oxygen and some flammable substance. Fire cannot burn without oxygen, and the more oxygen there is, the hotter and faster a fire will burn. More oxygen also makes it easier for materials to ignite.
yes according tohttp:/www.chemheritage.org/explore/milestone_greek_fire.html