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flame

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Dictionary: flame   (flām) pronunciation
 
n.
  1. The zone of burning gases and fine suspended matter associated with rapid combustion; a hot, glowing mass of burning gas or vapor.
  2. The condition of active, blazing combustion: burst into flame.
  3. Something resembling a flame in motion, brilliance, intensity, or shape.
  4. A violent or intense passion.
  5. Informal. A sweetheart.
  6. Informal. An insulting criticism or remark meant to incite anger, as on a computer network.

v., flamed, flam·ing, flames.

v.intr.
  1. To burn brightly; blaze.
  2. To color or flash suddenly: cheeks that flamed with embarrassment.
  3. Informal. To make insulting criticisms or remarks, as on a computer network, to incite anger.
v.tr.
  1. To burn, ignite, or scorch (something) with a flame.
  2. Informal. To insult or criticize provokingly, as on a computer network.
  3. Obsolete. To excite; inflame.
phrasal verb:

flame out

  1. To fail: “Only a handful of companies have flamed out in the two decades since the birth of the [biotech] industry” (Rhonda L. Rundle).

[Middle English, from Anglo-Norman flaumbe, variant of Old French flambe, from flamble, from Latin flammula, diminutive of flamma.]

flamer flam'er n.
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An exothermic reaction front or wave in a gaseous medium. Consider a uniform body of gas in which an exothermic chemical reaction (that liberates heat) is initiated by raising the temperature to a sufficiently high level; the reaction is started by a localized release of heat, as by a sufficiently energetic spark, and then spreads from the point of initiation. If the reaction is relatively slow, the whole gas will be involved before the initial region has finished reacting. If the reaction is relatively fast, the reaction zone will develop as a thin front or wave propagating into the unreacted gas, leaving fully reacted gas behind. If the front, in addition, shows luminosity (emission of light), the flame may be considered a classical example. However, perceptible emission of visible radiation is not essential to the definition.

Sufficient reaction rates may also be attained under special conditions (when the gas is very slowly heated inside a closed vessel) without very high temperatures if free radicals are generated in good concentration; this gives so-called cool flames.

The most common flame-producing reaction is combustion, which is broadly defined as a reaction between fuel and an oxidizer. The oxidizer is typically oxygen (usually in air), but a variety of other substances (for example, bromine with hydrogen) can play the same role in combination with the right fuel. While the overall theoretical reaction in a combustion flame—namely, fuel and oxidizer making fully oxidized products such as carbon dioxide and water vapor—is invariably simple, the actual reaction mechanism is typically very complex, involving many intermediate steps and compounds. Free radicals are generally present and figure prominently in the mechanism. See also Free radical.

An overall reaction involving just one reactant is chemical decomposition, for example, ozone decomposing into oxygen. Decomposition flames are usually simpler chemically than combustion flames.

Combustion flames are broadly divided into premixed flames and diffusion flames. Premixed flames occur when fuel and oxidizer are mixed before they burn. Diffusion flames occur when fuel and oxidizer mix and burn simultaneously. The intermediate case, with partial premixing, has been of relatively low theoretical and practical interest. Flames are further categorized on the basis of shape, time behavior (stationary or moving), flow regime (laminar or turbulent), buoyancy regime (forced convection or natural convection), presence or absence of confinement (as by combustion chamber walls), and flow complications (such as swirling flow and crosswind).


 

To communicate emotionally via e-mail. Just as people might differ about what is polite behavior and what is not, whether an e-mail message is flaming is also in the eye of the beholder. Vulgar cursing would definitely be flaming, however. See netiquette and holy war.

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Send an angry or harshly worded e-mail. Advertisers who send unsolicited electronic mail messages can expect some percentage of negative responses called a flame rate. Advertisers wishing to keep their flame rate to a minimum operate on an opt-in basis, sending e-mails only to persons who either request specific information or give advance permission for information to be sent. See also spam.

 

1. (noun) a public post or E-Mail message expressing a strong opinion or criticism of another post or e-mail.

2. (verb tr.) send or post such a message to someone.

 
Thesaurus: flame
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noun

    The visible signs of combustion: blaze1, conflagration, fire, flare-up. See hot/cold/lukewarm.

verb

    To undergo combustion: blaze1, burn, combust, flare. See hot/cold/lukewarm.

 
Antonyms: flame
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n

Definition: lover, passion
Antonyms: hate


 
Hacker Slang: flame
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[at MIT, orig. from the phrase flaming asshole]

1. vi. To post an email message intended to insult and provoke.

2. vi. To speak incessantly and/or rabidly on some relatively uninteresting subject or with a patently ridiculous attitude.

3. vt. Either of senses 1 or 2, directed with hostility at a particular person or people.

4. n. An instance of flaming. When a discussion degenerates into useless controversy, one might tell the participants “Now you're just flaming” or “Stop all that flamage!” to try to get them to cool down (so to speak).

The term may have been independently invented at several different places. It has been reported from MIT, Carleton College and RPI (among many other places) from as far back as 1969, and from the University of Virginia in the early 1960s.

It is possible that the hackish sense of ‘flame’ is much older than that. The poet Chaucer was also what passed for a wizard hacker in his time; he wrote a treatise on the astrolabe, the most advanced computing device of the day. In Chaucer's Troilus and Cressida, Cressida laments her inability to grasp the proof of a particular mathematical theorem; her uncle Pandarus then observes that it's called “the fleminge of wrecches.” This phrase seems to have been intended in context as “that which puts the wretches to flight” but was probably just as ambiguous in Middle English as “the flaming of wretches” would be today. One suspects that Chaucer would feel right at home on Usenet.


 
Architecture: flame
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A hot (usually luminous) zone of gas and/or particulate matter in gaseous suspension that is undergoing combustion.


 
flame, phenomenon associated with the chemical reaction of a gas that has been heated above its kindling temperature with some other gas, usually atmospheric oxygen (see combustion). The heat and light given off are characteristic of the specific chemical reaction (or reactions) going on; the luminosity of the flame is usually caused by solid particles of foreign matter present (naturally or artificially) in the burning gas and heated to incandescence; and the shape of the flame is commonly that of a hollow cone. The simple flame occurring when a single gas, such as hydrogen, burns in another gas, such as air, shows two areas, or zones: an inner, cone-shaped area consisting of unburned gas; and an outer area in which the chemical reaction (the combination of hydrogen and oxygen to form water) is taking place. Furthermore, the flame is nonluminous and therefore very hot, since the chemical energy is nearly all transformed into heat energy. This reaction is illustrated in the flame of the oxyhydrogen blowpipe. The flame of the oxyacetylene torch is also extremely hot. A decrease in light with an increase in heat is brought about in the Bunsen burner flame (a more complex flame) by mixing the combustible gas with air before it is ignited. Flames become more complex as the combustible gas increases in complexity, since an increasing number of chemical reactions are involved. Three zones, for example, are apparent in the Bunsen burner flame: an inner zone of unburned gas; a middle zone called the reduction zone or reducing flame, since there the supply of oxygen is deficient and the oxygen is therefore removed from an oxide placed in it; and an outer, or oxidizing, zone. The candle flame is extremely complex. Several zones can be observed: a nonluminous inner portion where the melted wax produces gases; a middle area where the gases are decomposed to hydrogen, which burns, and carbon, which is heated to incandescence; and an outer, hardly visible region in which combustion is complete (carbon dioxide and water being formed). Flames are colored by the introduction of various substances, a fact utilized in the flame test for the identification of certain metals.


 

1. the luminous, irregular appearance usually accompanying combustion, or an appearance resembling it.
2. to render sterile by exposure to a flame.

  • f. cell — the excretory cell in cestodes and trematodes; their number and arrangement is a basis for identification.
  • f. figure — in skin lesions such as insect bite reactions, eosinophilic granulomas; characterized by areas of altered collagen surrounded by eosinophils and eosinophilic cytoplasmic granules.
  • f. follicle — inactive hair follicles with excessive trichilemmal keratinization.
  • f. retardants — see fire retardant.
 
Word Tutor: flame
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pronunciation

IN BRIEF: To burn brightly; blaze.

pronunciation The candle's flame flickered as she walked by.

 
Wikipedia: Flame
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Flames of charcoal in close-up
Laminar Flame generated by the burning of a candle.

A flame is the visible (light-emitting) part of a fire. It is caused by a highly exothermic reaction (for example, combustion, a self-sustaining oxidation reaction) taking place in a thin zone.[1] If a fire is hot enough to ionize the gaseous components, it can become a plasma.[2]

The color and temperature of a flame are dependent on the type of fuel involved in the combustion, as, for example, when a lighter is held to a candle. The applied heat causes the fuel molecules in the wick to vaporize. In this state they can then readily react with oxygen in the air, which gives off enough heat in the subsequent exothermic reaction to vaporize yet more fuel, thus sustaining a consistent flame. The high temperature of the flame tears apart the vaporized fuel molecules, forming various incomplete combustion products and free radicals, and these products then react with each other and with the oxidizer involved in the reaction. Sufficient energy in the flame will excite the electrons in some of the transient reaction intermediates such as CH and C2, which results in the emission of visible light as these substances release their excess energy (see spectrum below for an explanation of which specific radical species produce which specific colors). As the combustion temperature of a flame increases (if the flame contains small particles of unburnt carbon or other material), so does the average energy of the electromagnetic radiation given off by the flame (see blackbody).

Other oxidizers besides oxygen can be used to produce a flame. Hydrogen burning in chlorine produces a flame and in the process emits gaseous hydrogen chloride (HCl) as the combustion product.[3] Another of many possible chemical combinations is hydrazine and nitrogen tetroxide which is hypergolic and commonly used in rocket engines.

The chemical kinetics occurring in the flame is very complex and involves typically a large number of chemical reactions and intermediate species, most of them radicals. For instance, a well-known chemical kinetics scheme, GRI-Mech[4] , uses 53 species and 325 elementary reactions to describe combustion of natural gas.

There are different methods of distributing the required components of combustion to a flame. In a diffusion flame, oxygen and fuel diffuse into each other; where they meet the flame occurs. In a premixed flame, the oxygen and fuel are premixed beforehand, which results in a different type of flame. Candle flames (a diffusion flame) operate through evaporation of the fuel which rises in a laminar flow of hot gas which then mixes with surrounding oxygen and combusts.

Contents

Flame color

Different flame types of a Bunsen burner depend on oxygen supply. On the left a rich fuel with no premixed oxygen produces a yellow sooty diffusion flame; on the right a lean fully oxygen premixed flame produces no soot and the flame color is produced by molecular radicals, especially CH and C2 band emission. The purple color is an artifact of the photographic process
Spectrum of the blue (premixed, i.e., complete combustion) flame from a butane torch showing molecular radical band emission and Swan bands. Note that virtually all the light produced is in the blue to green region of the spectrum below about 565 nanometers, accounting for the bluish color of sootless hydrocarbon flames.
A flame test for sodium. Note that the yellow color in this gas flame does not arise from the blackbody emission of soot particles (as the flame is clearly a blue premixed complete combustion flame) but instead comes from the spectral line emission of sodium atoms, specifically the very intense "sodium D lines".

Flame color depends on several factors, the most important typically being blackbody radiation and spectral band emission, with both spectral line emission and spectral line absorption playing smaller roles. In the most common type of flame, hydrocarbon flames, the most important factor determining color is oxygen supply and the extent of fuel-oxygen "pre-mixture", which determines the rate of combustion and thus the temperature and reaction paths, thereby producing different color hues. In a laboratory under normal gravity conditions and with a closed oxygen valve, a Bunsen burner burns with yellow flame (also called a safety flame) at around 1,000 °C. This is due to incandescence of very fine soot particles that are produced in the flame. With increasing oxygen supply, less blackbody-radiating soot is produced due to a more complete combustion and the reaction creates enough energy to excite and ionize gas molecules in the flame, leading to a blue appearance. The spectrum of a premixed (complete combustion) butane flame on the right shows that the blue color arises specifically due to emission of excited molecular radicals in the flame, which emit most of their light well below ~565 nanometers in the blue and green regions of the visible spectrum. Flame temperatures of common items include a blow torch at 1,300 °C, a candle at 1,400 °C [1], a propane torch at 1995 °C, or a much hotter oxyacetylene combustion at 3,000 °C. Cyanogen produces an even hotter flame with a temperature of over 4525 °C (8180 °F) when it burns in oxygen.[5]

Generally speaking, the coolest part of a diffusion (incomplete combustion) flame will be red, transitioning to orange, yellow, and white the temperature increases as evidenced by changes in the blackbody radiation spectrum. For a given flame's region, the closer to white on this scale, the hotter that section of the flame is. The transitions are often apparent in TV pictures of fires, in which the color emitted closest to the fuel is white, with an orange section above it, and reddish flames the highest of all. Beyond the red the temperature is too low to sustain combustion, and black soot escapes. A blue-colored flame only emerges when the amount of soot decreases and the blue emissions from excited molecular radicals become dominant, though the blue can often be seen near the base of candles where airborne soot is less concentrated.

Flame temperature

When looking at a flame's temperature there are many factors which can change or apply. One important one is that a flame's color does not necessarily determine a temperature comparison because black-body radiation is not the only thing that produces or determines the color seen; therefore it is only an estimation of temperature. Here are other factors that determine its temperature:

  • Adiabatic flame - i.e. no loss of heat to the atmosphere (may differ in certain parts)
  • Atmospheric pressure
  • Percentage (%) oxygen content in the atmosphere
  • The fuel being burned (i.e. depends on how quickly the process occurs, how violent the combustion is)
  • Any Oxidation of the fuel
  • temperature of atmosphere.... links to adiabatic flame temperature (i.e. cooler atmosphere will lose more heat quicker)

In fires (commonly occurs in house fires) the cooler flames are often red and produce the most smoke. Here the red color compared to typical yellow color of the flames suggests that the temperature is lower. This is because there is a lack of oxygen in the room and therefore there is incomplete combustion and the flame temperature is low, often just 600 - 850 degrees celsius. This means that a lot of carbon monoxide is formed (which is a flammable gas if hot enough) which is when in Fire and Arson investigation there is greatest risk of backdraft. When this occurs flames get oxygen, carbon monoxide combusts and temporary temperatures of up to 2000 degrees celsius occur. This is one of the most frightening things that fire fighters encounter.

Common flame temperatures

Here is a rough guide to common flame temperatures, in the majority of the flame.

Common flame temperatures of gases in Air - 20 celsius atmoshpere, 1 Atm. pressure:

Material Burned Flame temperature (degrees celsius)
Charcoal 750 - 1200
Methane (natural Gas) 900 - 1200
Propane Blowtorch 1200 - 1700
Candle Flame 1100 ~
Magnesium 1900 - 2300
Hydrogen tourch up to 2000 ~
Acetylene Blowlamp/Blowtorch up to 2300 ~
oxy-Acetylene up to 3300 ~
Backdraft flame peak 1700 - 1950
Bunsen Burner flame 900 - 1600 (depending with air valvue)

Flames in microgravity

In zero gravity, convection does not carry the hot combustion products away from the fuel source, resulting in a spherical flame front.

In the year 2000 the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) of the United States discovered that gravity also plays an indirect role in flame formation and composition.[6] The common distribution of a flame under normal gravity conditions depends on convection, as soot tends to rise to the top of a flame (such as in a candle in normal gravity conditions), making it yellow. In microgravity or zero gravity environment, such as on a circular orbit , convection no longer occurs and the flame becomes spherical, with a tendency to become bluer and more efficient. There are several possible explanations for this difference, of which the most likely is the hypothesis that the temperature is sufficiently evenly distributed that soot is not formed and complete combustion occurs.[7] Experiments by NASA reveal that diffusion flames in microgravity allow more soot to be completely oxidized after they are produced than do diffusion flames on Earth, because of a series of mechanisms that behave differently in microgravity when compared to normal gravity conditions.[8][9] These discoveries have potential applications in applied science and industry, especially concerning fuel efficiency. A video of a microgravity flame in the NASA Glenn 5 s drop facility is at [2].


References

  1. ^ Law, C. K. (2006). "Laminar premixed flames". Combustion physics. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. p. 300. ISBN 0521870526. 
  2. ^ Verheest, Frank (2000). "Plasmas as the fourth state of matter". Waves in Dusty Space Plasmas. Norwell MA: Kluwer Academic. p. 1. ISBN 0792362322. 
  3. ^ "Reaction of Chlorine with Hydrogen". http://genchem.chem.wisc.edu/demonstrations/Inorganic/pages/Group67/chlorine_and_hydrogen.htm. 
  4. ^ Gregory P. Smith; David M. Golden, Michael Frenklach, Nigel W. Moriarty, Boris Eiteneer, Mikhail Goldenberg, C. Thomas Bowman, Ronald K. Hanson, Soonho Song, William C. Gardiner, Jr., Vitali V. Lissianski, and Zhiwei Qin, GRI-Mech 3.0, http://www.me.berkeley.edu/gri_mech/ 
  5. ^ Thomas, N.; Gaydon, A. G.; Brewer, L. (March 1952), "Cyanogen Flames and the Dissociation Energy of N2", The Journal of Chemical Physics 20 (3): 369–374, doi:10.1063/1.1700426, http://scitation.aip.org/getabs/servlet/GetabsServlet?prog=normal&id=JCPSA6000020000003000369000001&idtype=cvips&gifs=yes 
  6. ^ Spiral flames in microgravity, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 2000.
  7. ^ CFM-1 experiment results, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, April 2005.
  8. ^ LSP-1 experiment results, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, April 2005.
  9. ^ SOFBAL-2 experiment results, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, April 2005.

See also


 
Translations: Flame
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Dansk (Danish)
n. - flamme
v. intr. - flamme
v. tr. - flamme

idioms:

  • flame gun    apparat der fremkalder en flamme brugt til at dræbe ukrudt
  • flame out    blusse op
  • flame thrower    flammekaster
  • flame up    flamme op, blive blussende rød
  • go up in flames    gå op i flammer

Nederlands (Dutch)
vlam, geliefde, glans, oranjerood, hartstocht, soort mot, vlammen, uitbarsten, gloeien, signaleren d.m.v. vuur, doen vlammen, flamberen, schitteren, als een vlam wiegen, door vlammen overbrengen

Français (French)
n. - flamme (littér), (fig) feu, (Culin) à feu (doux/vif), rouge feu (couleur), torpille/flamme (e-mail)
v. intr. - flamboyer, flamber, brûler, s'enflammer, lancer une guerre d'insultes sur e-mail
v. tr. - (Culin) flamber, envoyer un message injurieux par e-mail

idioms:

  • flame gun    chalumeau
  • flame out    enflammer
  • flame thrower    lance-flammes
  • flame up    s'enflammer, s'emporter, flamboyer
  • go up in flames    s'enflammer

Deutsch (German)
n. - Flamme
v. - flammen, glühen

idioms:

  • flame gun    Flämmgerät
  • flame out    ausbrennen
  • flame thrower    Flammenwerfer
  • flame up    aufflammen, (fig) in Wut geraten, anfangen zu brennen
  • go up in flames    in Flammen aufgehen

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - φλόγα, (καθομ.) αγαπημένη, ερωμένη, (Η/Υ) προσβλητικό ηλεκτρονικό μήνυμα
v. - φλέγομαι, φλογίζομαι, λαμπαδιάζω, κορώνω, ανάβω, (Η/Υ) κατακεραυνώνω με προσβλητικό μήνυμα

idioms:

  • flame gun    φλογοβόλο
  • flame out    εκτοξεύω φλόγες
  • flame thrower    (στρατ.) φλογοβόλο (όπλο)
  • flame up    (ανα)φλέγομαι, λαμπαδιάζω, κορώνω
  • go up in flames    γίνομαι παρανάλωμα του πυρός

Italiano (Italian)
fiammeggiare, fiamma

idioms:

  • flame gun    lanciafiamme
  • flame out    fiammeggiare
  • flame thrower    lanciafiamme
  • go up in flames    andare in fiamme

Português (Portuguese)
n. - chama (f)
v. - incendiar

idioms:

  • flame gun    lança-chamas (m)
  • flame out    queimar de novo, enfurecer-se
  • flame thrower    lança-chamas (m) (Mil.)
  • flame up    enfurecer-se, enrubescer
  • go up in flames    incendiar-se

Русский (Russian)
огонь, пламя, вспыхивать, вспышка, предмет страсти, пассия

idioms:

  • flame gun    огнемет
  • flame out    вспыхнуть, гибель
  • flame thrower    огнемет
  • flame up    вспыхнуть
  • go up in flames    загореться

Español (Spanish)
n. - correo electrónico ofensivo
v. intr. - pasarse mandando y recibiendo correo electrónico
v. tr. - mandar correo electrónico ofensivo

idioms:

  • flame gun    lanzallamas
  • flame out    arder, encenderse
  • flame thrower    lanzallamas
  • flame up    inflamarse
  • go up in flames    incendiarse, quemarse

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - flamma, eld (bildl.), käresta (vard.), offensiv e-mail
v. - flamma, signalera med eld, värma i en låga, lysa upp med flammor, bränna med eldspruta, flambera, skicka offensiv e-mail, skicka e-mail i ett (i det oändliga)

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
火焰, 热情, 火舌, 燃烧, 闪耀, 爆发, 焚烧, 激动, 面红

idioms:

  • flame gun    喷火枪
  • flame out    突然冒火焰
  • flame thrower    喷火器, 火焰喷射器
  • flame up    爆发
  • go up in flames    着火, 烧毁, 消失, 不成功

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 火焰, 熱情, 火舌
v. intr. - 燃燒, 閃耀, 爆發
v. tr. - 焚燒, 激動, 面紅

idioms:

  • flame gun    噴火槍
  • flame out    突然冒火焰
  • flame thrower    噴火器, 火焰噴射器
  • flame up    爆發
  • go up in flames    著火, 燒毀, 消失, 不成功

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 불길, 불쾌한 전자메일
v. intr. - 불길을 내다, (얼굴)붉어지다, 전자메일을 쓰다
v. tr. - ~을 태우다, ~을 흥분 시키다, 불쾌한 전자메일을 보내다

idioms:

  • flame out    (비행기의) 제트 엔진의 갑작스런 정지
  • flame up    불꽃같이 빛나다, 얼굴이 확 붉어지다
  • go up in flames    건물이 타오르다

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 炎, 燃えるような輝き, 情熱
v. - 炎を出す, 燃え上がる, 炎のように輝く, ぱっと赤らむ, かっと怒り出す

idioms:

  • flame gun    火炎除草機
  • flame out    突然燃え上がる, 突然燃焼停止する
  • flame thrower    火炎放射器
  • flame up    燃え上がる, かっとなる, 赤面する
  • go up in flames    燃え上がる

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) شعله , لهب, بريد الكتروني مزعج (فعل) يلتهب, يرسل بريد الكتروني مزعج, يطول في رساله الكترونيه‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮להבה, אש, זוהר‬
v. intr. - ‮פרץ (רגש), התכעס, בער, זהר כלהבה‬
v. tr. - ‮הבעיר, אותת באש‬


 
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