Not much, spill a little over the item and set fire to it.
The traditional answer is that you need a fuel, an oxidizer, and a source of ignition. In more general terms, something will "burn" if there is a reaction that is sufficiently exothermic (gives off heat) that it can generate hot gasses as a byproduct - hot enough to luminesce - and can sustain that reaction for a prolonged period.
For a flame to burn it needs fuel, oxygen, and heat.
Rockets need to have oxygen, or another oxidizer, in order to burn fuel and create the necessary combustion for propulsion. The fuel and oxidizer are typically stored separately and mixed together in the combustion chamber to produce the chemical reaction needed for thrust.
Technically hydrogen and helium do not need oxygen to burn, they burn by themselves, otherwise the object that needs burning must have oxygen as a supplimental fuel source.
Air is fed into the cylinder - to mix with fuel. The fuel cannot burn without air !
oxygen
You need to know certain variables the pilot is using, like the speed, engine power, and the payload
Rockets need a fuel source, such as liquid hydrogen or kerosene, and an oxidizer, such as liquid oxygen, to burn the fuel. The combination of fuel and oxidizer creates a chemical reaction that produces thrust, propelling the rocket forward. Additionally, rockets require an ignition source, such as a spark or heat, to initiate the combustion process.
When we burn fossil fuels, that fossil fuel is gone. *POOF!* And it'll take millions of years for the nonrenewable resource to form again. Therefore we need to conserve fossil fuels as much as possible.
We know how much we consumed and how much we need to burn.
nothing at all but we need to do somthing nothing at all but we need to do somthing
You need to have someone read the codes from the ECM and diagnose the problem. My guess is somthing is causing too much fuel being dumped in and not burning the fuel efficiently. I recommend getting this done ASAP.