Fire is not a state of matter as the examples you gave. Fire is a reaction. It consumes matter, changing the solid to it's components of ash(solid), water vapor(gas), and heat.
No fire is not liquid solid or gass it is a plasma another form of matter there are in all 5 forms of matter
The normally accepted states of matter are solid, liquid, gas, and plasma. Or as the ancients said, earth, water, air and fire.
If you use enough heat, anything that won't either sublime, which is to go directly from solid to gas (dry ice, wood, some inks), or ignite, which is to catch fire, will change from a solid to a liquid.
Either a substance is a liquid, or it is a solid. It can't be both.If it's a solid, it's called a solid.
Yes, light is a form of pure energy as it has no mass. Similar to things like thunder and fire, light is none of the three phases of matter: solid, liquid, gas.
It is solid
Perhaps you meant to ask whether fire is a gas, liquid, or solid. Is that what you meant?
Yes
Fire is a gas.
Any solid whose melting point is lower than that of the fire. The question is ambiguous because the temperature of the fire it not stated. The sun is form of a fire but its surface temperature is several million Kelvins, nothing including steel is solid at that temperature. A candle light is around 900 degrees steel is solid at this temperature.
Fire, before you think differently, is a form of matter. Everything is. Fire itself is in the gas state. Some people think it is a solid, but in fact it does not have the substances that make it solid (or liquid for that matter).
plastic fire is solid fire so u can use DCP fire extinguisher . other wise water.
No
water / take away air
its fire and gas
fire
foam
Depends of the materials