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.
well plazma is a state of matter so all elements can become plasma. so if iron has enough heat energy it will be plasma
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.
Lightening and very hot flames, the filaments in a plasma ball, all of the stars.
It would cool the iron. Iron is red hot at about 700 C
Essentially they all have some form of iron or iron alloy.
The molecules of a hot gas have the most kinetic energy. The molecules of a hot solid will contain the most energy per volume.
c. The sun
Yes, stars contain plasma. A star is made up of virtually all plasma.
There is a bit of a misconception here ... Plasma in itself is not a substance any more than "liquid" or "solid" or "gas" in itself is a specific substance. Plasma is a state of matter. Stars are hot glowing balls of gas in which intense pressure and heat (which results from the intense pressure) cause nuclear fussion. This causes them to glow. Many gases in the star are in the plasma phase, but they are not "made of plasma" so to speak. Stars are made mostly of hydrogen and helium, though white dwarves also contain carbon and stars even further in their life cycle contain iron.
A Plasma must contain many ions and electrons.
Many things contain plasma mostly things in the sky.
plasma
it depend on how it starts most of them do have plasma
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
Hemoglobin's ironRed blood cells contain hemoglobin, a substance which is rich in iron. The iron is bound to the hemoglobin molecules (the protein). The iron atom that is complexed by "haem" units is what gives the color. Iron is a transition element.
No. But plasma does contain glucose, urea, albumin and fibrinogen.
When you turn it on, yes. The glowing electrical arcs contain plasma.