Inside the Holland tunnel. Inside a submerged submarine.
Yes
Fire stops under water because water deprives the fire of oxygen, which is essential for combustion. Without oxygen, the chemical reaction that sustains the fire cannot continue, causing the flames to be extinguished.
An ordinary fire would not survive under water, for a common fire requires fuel, oxygen, and heat. under water there would be no oxygen available, and the heat would be conducted away too quickly. HOWEVER oxy-acetylene gas cutting can be done under water, for we carry our oxygen with us. And bulk magnesium will burn under water (incendary bombs).
Keep it under water
Grace Under Fire - 1993 Grace Under Water 2-1 was released on: USA: 20 September 1994 Germany: 31 October 1995
Yes he/her is fine cause if he or she might be frightened and they can breath under water.
Pour water in some wall then get fire and hold click under the water.
put fire clone under water in a pot or cup shape
It is possible for a fire to "burn" under water, but it's probably an "unusual case" where a combustible metal is involved. Some metals, like the alkali metals from Group 1 of the periodic table, will react with water. They can actually "burn" under water because they react with the water taking oxygen. And if you guessed that water cannot be used to extinguish these metals if they are burning in air, you would be correct.
A fire hose is used to stop a fire by its ability to transfer water. The hose will deliver water from a source through a nozzle and onto the flames. We typically find a hose connected to a pump, which provides water under pressure. The hose will deliver that pressurized water to the nozzle, and a firefighter can direct the stream as needed.
No, the water pressure is far too great.
phosphorus