Yes
The kind of smoke from a burning object depends on the object itself. The common smoke that is given off is Hydrogen, Carbon Dioxide, Carbon Monoxide, and small amounts of Water Vapor.
A crack pipe...dopey!
Heat, smoke, and the consumption or change of the fire's object.
Because the smoke you see during the burning, and the hot gases that you don't see, carry part of the mass away from the object.
The composition of smoke depends on the nature of the burning fuel and the conditions of combustion, for example, when paper/wood is burned, the smoke you see is those volatile hydrocarbons evaporating from the wood. Combustion causes things within the fuel, or object being burned, to evaporate - this is smoke.
Inhaling any 'smoke' from a burning object is dangerous as it contains toxins by the very nature of burning.
Well first you get the bud and chop it up and put it in the bowl and smoke it and get high so dont drive high......
Neither can make smoke. Smoke is made from the burning of an object without the right amount of oxygen to burn properly. Cold air or hor air if introduced to the opposite temperature can make water vapor.
I still don't understand how an object can be seen to vanish. With a quick flourish of his hand and a puff of smoke from behind the handkerchief, the magician made the rabbit vanish.
Smoke a Little Smoke was created on 2010-06-21.
environmental tobacco smoke (secondhand smoke)