Well like with any flame, the lighter the flame, the higher the temperature of the flame. If the flam is burning Yellow, it is at a higher temperature and is burning more oxygen than an orange flame is. That is your difference other than the color.
1900 degrees Celsius
Depends mainly on the amount of water and the starting temperature and the measure of the flame.
because the safety flame will do less harm compared to a roaring blue flame which burns at a hotter temperature. The tip of the dark blue bit in the blue flame is the hottest (The safety flame is the yellow one)
The flames of a roaring campfire or bonfire reach temperatures of about 572 degrees Fahrenheit. The hottest flame is carbon sub nitrate burning in pure oxygen with a temperature of 9,008 degrees Fahrenheit.
No The temperature of the candle flame is out of the temperature range of the clinical thermometer.
it depends on the flames temperature the flame will turn blue at a high temperature
The temperature of the flame.
The top of of the flame has the highest temperature.
A white flame is the hottest flame possible in normal air. The temperature of a white flame ranges from 1,400 to 1,600 degrees F.
The temperature of a flame changes with variables such as the type of substance being burned, pressure etc.
The maximal temperature is in the roaring blue flame - up to 700 0C.
Well like with any flame, the lighter the flame, the higher the temperature of the flame. If the flam is burning Yellow, it is at a higher temperature and is burning more oxygen than an orange flame is. That is your difference other than the color.
3315.555556ºC It is my understanding that an acetylene torch produces a flame temperature of approx. 6000 degrees Fahrenheit.
The color of the flame depends upon temperature. Please see this link.
No. The lowest temperature , with oxygen closed off and a yellow flame , is about 1000 degrees Celsius. With oxgen feed open temperature of the flame can reach 1300 degrees.
This temperature depends on the fuel used and working conditions.