no not all metals produce a colour flame.
Flame colours come from alkai metals reacting with salts to produce different colours.
The color is brick red.
It explodes actually.
You are referring here to the "flame test" to identify an unknown substance by the color it produces in a flame. The test is more usefull in determining what the sample does notcontain, rather than what it does contain, since many substances will produce similar colors in a flame test.Manganese, for instance, will produce yellow-green, but so will molybdenum.Sodium will produce a bright yellow color which you have seen in sodium vapour lamps that are used along highways. Iron produces a gold color, and copper, a blue-green.There are many others.
This compound will not produce a flame as Aluminum, which is the element that controls whether photons(flame color) are released or not.
the yellow flame
no
beacause Hydrogen is not in coal burning and it goes directly into vapour which cannot produce a flame only a glow
The flame color would be green.
Red-violet.
The color of lithium in the flame test is red.
potassium (K) produces a blueish purple flame
Red
it does not produce a flame colour because magnesium's colour is not in the visible light spectrum therefore we can not see the colour
no not all metals produce a colour flame.
Because it contains propane and butane which produce blue flame on combustion