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A Bunsen Burner
Blue and purple
As hot as yo mam in a oven with ya dad and a finger licking kfc bargin bucket full of diamond encrusted platapus and you are a flamingo man boris johnson will be king! BACON!
Very hot. 70-100 degrees celcius. HOT!
70 degrees and the roaring flame is 100 degrees so yeah hot hot dont touch
The "air-hole" of a bunsen burner allows some of the flame to escape so that the heating flame does not become too hot. A flame that is too hot can damage laboratory equipment. When the air hole is closed it is a yellow sooty flame like the fires we have at home.
Because it is 'dirty', meaning it leaves soot. Also because it isn't that hot.
A Bunsen Burner, is piece of equipment particularly used in a science lab. The Bunsen Burners creates a gas flame which is used to assist in experiments. The Bunsen burner originating from 1852, given the name by Robert Bunsen.
Like a Bunsen burner on steroids... Instead of 1 point of flame, you get 20 or something. It gets things crazy hot.
Safety. The yellow flame is easier to see and burns much less hot.
A normal Bunsen burner has a chimney which contains gas, a collar to adjust the air hole, a air hole that will leak gas, a gas tap that provides gas to the burner and the rubber tubing leads gas to the burner.
in bunsen burner complete combustion takes place,it produces blue flame and blue region is the hottest part of a flame.so the whole flame is very hot,either the outermost part of flame.