Methane is a gas. It has nothing to do with candles.
Yes, it's Methane and will ignite.
Candle wax, gasoline, and methane are all fuels, but they differ significantly in their properties and combustion characteristics. Candle wax, primarily composed of hydrocarbons, burns slower and produces less energy per unit compared to gasoline, which is a more refined and energy-dense liquid fuel. Methane, a gas, ignites easily and burns cleanly, producing mainly carbon dioxide and water, whereas candle wax and gasoline can produce more soot and pollutants. Overall, while all three can be used as fuels, gasoline and methane are generally more efficient and cleaner-burning options compared to candle wax.
It could mean that the candle wick was composed of or covered with a substance that can undergo spontaneous combustion, or that it can catch fire at room temperature by chemical reaction. There is no supernatural possibility behind a candle lighting apparently by itself.
Methane is a gas, so won't be hot unless ignited. The heat is about the same as a candle, unless air is used to feed the flame - same as on a bunsen burner.
Methane was also knows as "swamp gas" because it was exuded by swampy ground. Under some conditions it could catch fire (a but like a small cheap candle) and the unsuspecting person going to see what the small flame they could see was. This meant going into dangerous ground and they could get lost or hurt in the swamp.... that is, they had been foolish to follow it.
No, the sentence is not correct. It should be "The boy could blow out the candle." The verb "blow" needs to be in the base form after "could."
you could get it wet but it will ruin the candle or you could use honey put a little dab on the candle and it will go out the next time you lite it the honey will burn off you could get it wet but it will ruin the candle or you could use honey put a little dab on the candle and it will go out the next time you lite it the honey will burn off
This Could Be a Possibility was created on 2005-10-25.
hydrocarbons - organic compounds consisting of hydrogen and carbon atoms.
I suppose the answer would be 1 Atm. It is only 0.00017% methane in our atmosphere, but the pressure is still 1 Atm, not of methane alone, but gases combined. but this is only deducted from the possibility of extracting methane from our atmosphere. There is not enough information in the question to give an accurate answer. Regards.
Put the candle on a technical balance.
the dark ages weren't really dark for everyone because some could afford candle's and candle holders but some couldn't. the people that could afford candle's and candle holders were rich and some slightly richer than others and those richer than others could afford fancy candle's, the people who were rich but not really rich could afford normal candle's. the people who couldn't afford any type of candle's were the poor people and they sat on the streets in the dark and couldn't see a thing.