The plasma in a fluorescent light or plasma ball, is contained by glass. Fusion plasmas are too hot to contain in any "container", so it is contained by magnetic fields, The plasma in the sun is partly contained by gravity, though a proportion of it is lost as the Solar Wind.
layers of film or glass plates?
If the iron in question is one that is used to take wrinkles out of clothing, no, there is no plasma in an iron. Heating materials to a few hundred degrees is insufficient to create a plasma.
it contain Glucose, Amino acids, Vitamins, Mineral salts, Hormones, Carbon Dioxide, Urea, and Fibrinogen.
This is the first time someone mentions the plasma ball in the few years I been in wikianswers. I like this question because with the plasma ball we could see how Tesla conducted his experiments. Tesla invented the plasma lamp for his experiments with high frequency currents of electricity in a vacuum glass tube, scientifically called an "evacuated tube" The Plasma Ball or lamp was actually first named by Tesla as "an inert gas discharge tube" for a better description. He wanted better light bulbs and he created those as well.
Yes, stars contain plasma. A star is made up of virtually all plasma.
No. Glass is an amorphous solid.
A Plasma must contain many ions and electrons.
Many things contain plasma mostly things in the sky.
The plasma in a fluorescent light or plasma ball, is contained by glass. Fusion plasmas are too hot to contain in any "container", so it is contained by magnetic fields, The plasma in the sun is partly contained by gravity, though a proportion of it is lost as the Solar Wind.
plasma
it depend on how it starts most of them do have plasma
plasma
A plasma monitor is a monitor with pubes springled on top.
No. But plasma does contain glucose, urea, albumin and fibrinogen.
When you turn it on, yes. The glowing electrical arcs contain plasma.
No