Thermability
Flammability is the property you seek. There will be test methods in ASTM, ISO, and similar to evaluate this property.
is called flammability
flammability
combustibility
flammability
The ability to burn is flammability.
oil or gas fired by a gun
oxygen
When you "burn" something you simply combine it with oxygen, you oxidise it. Rapid buring of a metal can be achieved in the presence of heat and Oxygen to produce an oxide of the metal.
No. Oxygen is not flammable. Rather, it supports the combustion of flammable materials. Fire is a chemical reaction between oxygen and some flammable material. Higher concentrations of oxygen will cause a fire to burn hotter and faster.
If I'm understanding your question, the answer is that oxygen doesn't burn, it just helps other things to burn. There are things called 'fuel-air' bombs that take advantage of oxygen's ability to increase explosive potential.
Burning in common language is the oxidation of a substance. Many materials may burn - carbon, sulphur, phosphorous, silicon, iron, and so on.
A material's ability to burn in the presence of oxygen is called flammability.
Flammability
Flammability
Flammability
oxygen
An object that is able to catch fire in the presence of oxygen.
Most thing burn in the presence of oxygen.
the presence od oxygen
This is the chemical property called combustibility.
No. Oxygen is not flammable. Rather, it is what allows flammable materials to burn.
Sodium nitrate itself does not burn. It is an oxidizer. It can be used in place of oxygen to burn materials.
Burning of all materials involve oxygen.