Silicon may certainly burn, but whether explosively I don't know.
Yes, plutonium can burn in air.
If you get brick hot enough to melt, it would change into silicon Any impurities with a different melting point would burn off or float on the silicon and when allowed to cool the silicon would resemble obsidian.
what is the lightest air
no
no
idk what u mean by "burning" it burn silicon have really high melting point so its not easy to melt it
Silicon may certainly burn, but whether explosively I don't know.
the periodic table
No
Yes, plutonium can burn in air.
Not from any heat they will ever experience in real life... that's what they are for. They are made of silicon and can be heated red hot, but you can still handle them by the edges and corners, as they are mostly air.
How do you treat an air bag burn
All fuels that 'burn' require air or an oxygen source for combustion. Therefore,fossil fuel also burn in the air.
If you get brick hot enough to melt, it would change into silicon Any impurities with a different melting point would burn off or float on the silicon and when allowed to cool the silicon would resemble obsidian.
Burning in common language is the oxidation of a substance. Many materials may burn - carbon, sulphur, phosphorous, silicon, iron, and so on.
Do you burn gas when you run your air conditioning in your cae