No, hydrogen usually burns colorless. It is possible to see a slight blue tinge sometimes.
Propane has not a color.
Can't tell, 'cause water doesn't burn. Water is totally oxidized hydrogen. It is essentially hydrogen "ash". Just as you cannot reignite the ashes from a fire you cannot re-burn water after hydrogen is burned with oxygen to water.
hydrogen
The hotter a hydrocarbon gas burns, the bluer the flame. An orange flame indicates a cool flame with incomplete combustion since soot (unburnt carbon) glows orange. Hydrogen gas burns so completely and so hot that it emits light in the ultraviolet. You cannot see a hydrogen gas flame. Alcohol fires, similarly, tend to burn very efficiently and are nearly invisible--as anybody who watches NASCAR races knows.
When oxygen fuses with hydrogen it burns in the sun. Of course just think of the sun dummy. When oxygen fuses with hydrogen it burns in the sun. Of course just think of the sun dummy.
It burns a distinct bright orange/red color which is unique to hydrogen alone.
Strengh orange burns bright as sun, orange is high visibility. Orange is colour of uk mobile network. Weakness orange is not red. Orange is not bold.
Propane has not a color.
Calcium Chloride burns a deep orange with a slightly lighter orange core and has a light red glow at the top. The colour calcium chloride burns is described as brick red.
calcium burns red sodium burns orange
calcium burns red sodium burns orange
pale blue or almost invisible. you can see hydrogen combusting from the reactors' explosion in Japan
yes, hydrogen gas burns with a pop!
reddish purple
No, hydrogen produces water (H2O) when it burns.
Yes, hydrogen burns.
Can't tell, 'cause water doesn't burn. Water is totally oxidized hydrogen. It is essentially hydrogen "ash". Just as you cannot reignite the ashes from a fire you cannot re-burn water after hydrogen is burned with oxygen to water.