Both stupid
"Flame" is the visible energy when burning something. "Heat" is given off a flame and countless other things. Flame produces heat, but heat does not always generate from flame, and heat almost never produces flame (friction might count). And if you want the definitions: HEAT: a form of energy that is transferred by a difference in temperature. FLAME: the process of combustion of materials producing heat and light and (often) smoke. If you want to think of it a different way: Flame is what you see when you look at a fire and heat if what you feel from the fire.
Why The long Flame
Blaze, bonfire, heat, inferno.
His power is the Mera Mera no mi, the Flame-Flame fruit. It is fire he controls.
Any and all heat, like flame, is nonliving. A forest fire is flame and is therefore nonliving.
The heat generated by the fire warms surrounding gasses and they rise, pulling the flame up.
Fire is attracted to oxygen, fuel, and heat. It requires these three components to ignite and sustain a flame.
Heat rises so the draught pulls the flame up
Yes, when moved correctly, the stick creates heat from friction. This heat can be enough to produce a flame.
more oxygen is flowing to the flame, to create fire you need heat, fuel and oxygen.
Fire blitz,turbo blaze,fire spin,flame wheel,ember,heat crash and lastly flamethrower
No, not at all. There can be heat without flame. Something can smolder and put out more smoke than something that is at a rolling fire.