yes it does
heat,cold,fire,wind
fire is the effect of excessive heat. So naturally where sufficient amount of heat & fuel & oxygen is available then a chemical reaction takes place causing heat , that is called fire .So the fire is hot.
Coriolis effect and difference in heat
Heat, smoke, fire...
The cooling effect is called the wind chill effect. It is the increase in the rate of heat loss experienced by a body due to the combination of wind and cold temperatures.
No, the increased cooling caused by wind is not due to the Coriolis effect. The Coriolis effect is a phenomenon that describes the apparent deflection of moving objects caused by the Earth's rotation. The cooling effect of wind is mainly due to the process of convection and the transfer of heat away from a surface.
Will block / affect the direction of: wind rain stroms snow heat
Increasing wind speed increases the rate of heat loss from the body, making the air feel colder than it actually is. This results in a lower perceived temperature, known as the wind chill effect. The higher the wind speed, the stronger the wind chill effect.
Increased cooling by wind from body heat is called convective cooling. This process occurs when heat is transferred from the body to the air through convection, resulting in a cooling effect due to the movement of air.
A fire requires 3 elements: a fuel source, an oxidant, and a source of heat. Furthermore, all 3 elements need to be in the correct ratios, otherwise a fire will not be formed or sustained. Also, the fuel source is required to be vapourised before it can react with the oxidant. An example of this is a tree burning in a forest. The tree provides fuel in the form of hydrocarbons (hydrogen and carbon), and the air provides the oxidant in the form of oxygen. Sunlight could provide enough heat source to drive the tree to combust. The heat source helps to vapourise the fuel so that is can react with the oxidant (the tree bark/wood goes from solid to vapour at the surface where heat is applied). The force/speed of wind can help provide enough oxygen to power the fire, but it can also provide too much oxygen which would put out the fire. A strong wind could also blow all the vapourised fuel away from the heat source and stop the fire.
Fire in the Wind was created in 1977.
fire grows with wind