Not on their own own. They still need to be heated for any notable reaction to take place.
Combustible materials such as paper, wood, or gasoline can be mixed with oxygen to create fire. Mixing oxygen with a combustible material provides the necessary components for a fire to ignite and burn.
No. Hydrogen combines with oxygen to make water.
Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen.The amount of Carbon always equals the amount of Oxygen, and there is exactly twice as much Hydrogen as Carbon.
hydrogen + oxygen → hydrogen oxide
they make water
hydrogen and oxygen are the two elements which make up water
it can make water(h20)when mixed with oxygen it is an extremly flamable gas for example the Hindenburg was filled with hydrogen gas to make it lift off but the designers miss calculated so it caused a horrendess effect
Hydrogen and oxygen. What is probably meant is which two elements make dihydrogen oxide (water; H2O). The answer remains the same: hydrogen and oxygen.
Hydrogen an react with oxygen to form water and not helium
Hydrogen can be flammable and highly reactive in the presence of oxygen, which can make fires burn more vigorously. It can also create explosive mixtures if ignited in the right conditions.
The produce water by direct combination when hydrogen is burnt in oxygen.
If you mix fire with additional oxygen, it would likely cause the fire to burn more intensely or spread more rapidly due to increased fuel supply. The additional oxygen would support combustion and increase the rate of the chemical reaction, making the fire burn hotter and faster.