No, fire is not a state of matter. Instead it is a chemical reaction called combustion. If something burns, combustion combines the burning matter with oxygen and produces intense heat. http://site2.wikianswers.com/templates/icons/ql.gif); background-position: left top; background-repeat: no-repeat; height: 22px">
Zacharyrod: To put it simply, fire is a mixture of varying gases, with oxygen as the key ingredient, at high temperatures due to the chemical reaction occuring. So therefore, fire's state of matter is a gas.
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* fire can be reaction or state of a matter because the chemical reaction called combustion is one of the reaction of the chemical's that combines that cause of burning.
* sometimes fire is cause by state of matter because it cause is the gas so,it is a matter,matter and reaction is one.
The chemical equation for complete combustion (unbalanced):
(Hydrocarbon) + O2 >>>>>> CO2 + H2O
== == == ==
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 a plasma. Fire is a chemical reaction that produces heat and light, while plasma is a state of matter where atoms are ionized and have free-moving electrons.
Yes, fire is made of matter. It is a chemical reaction that releases heat and light energy.
Yes, fire does have matter. Fire is a chemical reaction that releases energy in the form of heat and light. The matter involved in a fire includes the fuel being burned and the oxygen in the air that reacts with the fuel to produce the flames.
fire is considered something called a plasma
Fire is a form of energy, not matter. It results from the rapid chemical reaction of a fuel with oxygen, releasing heat and light energy.
No it is not. Fire is a chemical reaction involving matter (molecules). You could have and anti-matter fire however. It would be hot just like regular fire but not as hot if you mixed the anti-matter and matter fuel. The mutual annihilation would release a lot of energy in accordance with E=MC².
I think it can be classified as either a Chemical Reaction. Or an Endothermic reaction. I may not be understanding the correct queston though.
Fire is not considered matter because it is a form of energy rather than a substance with mass and volume. It is a result of a chemical reaction between a fuel and oxygen, and does not have a fixed shape or size like matter does.
Fire is not considered matter because it is a product of a chemical reaction that releases energy in the form of heat and light. Fire is a process, not a substance, so it does not have mass or take up space like traditional forms of matter.
There are varying opinions on the state of matter of a flame. It is commonly agreed upon that fire is at most stages, a gaseous state of matter. At the base of the flame, unburned oxygen molecules and vaporized fuel particles lay. Higher up the flame, the molecules begin to dissociate and react with one another. Higher up still, the combustion reaction is completed and waste gases are emitted as a result. Some contend that when a flame becomes hot enough, the gas particles ionize and result in a different state of matter: plasma. Still, others also contend that fire does not fit under any states of matter.
Change of the state of the matter, release of a gas, a new odor, a new color, formation of a precipitate, a violent reaction with explosion or fire, increase of the temperature, photoluminiscence or phosphorescence, etc.