Calcium is calcium. Your body doesn't know or care if it came from milk, Orange Juice, or chalk however the presence of vitamin D appears to help with absorption.
The color orange in fireworks can be produced by using a combination of pyrotechnic chemicals such as calcium salts, including calcium chloride or calcium sulfates, mixed with a fuel such as charcoal or sulfur. These chemicals provide the orange color when they are burned and produce the characteristic orange flames in fireworks displays.
yes, Calcium can be burned. When burned it releases a bright orange color in the flame.
When the electrons that are excited by the energy of burning drop back into lower energy levels they emit light at that orange wavelength.
Fortification The addition of calcium to orange juice products by food manufactures is most properly termed nutrient fortification.
Normal flames are pretty much orange. So if you are seeing orange, you probably are not seeing the color you need to see. Sodium is a hard one to see sometimes on top of the orange color.
Calcium
The orange has potassium,calcium,phosphorus vitamin d and vitamin e
calcium burns red sodium burns orange
calcium burns red sodium burns orange
calcium chloride burns with a orange flame.
milk, orange juice
ORANGE JUICE!:PVery Yummy Too.
Calcium Chloride burns a deep orange with a slightly lighter orange core and has a light red glow at the top. The colour calcium chloride burns is described as brick red.
Calcium gives an orange glow. It is in the s block.
calcium fortified orange juice
The color orange in fireworks can be produced by using a combination of pyrotechnic chemicals such as calcium salts, including calcium chloride or calcium sulfates, mixed with a fuel such as charcoal or sulfur. These chemicals provide the orange color when they are burned and produce the characteristic orange flames in fireworks displays.
bright orange