yes
it is Oxygen, heat, fuel. the fire triangle is just a short saying for all these elements
No, they do not, but if your home is cold, a small heat lamp may be necessary.
The three components of fire are heat, fuel, and oxygen. Heat is required to ignite the fuel, while fuel provides the material that sustains the fire. Oxygen is necessary for the combustion process to occur.
Fire, all fire, every fire consists of 3 things: Heat, Fuel & Oxygen. When all 3 are together in the right mix you have fire, if one or more elements is not sufficient then you cannot have fire. You therefore need as much heat as necessary along with the fuel & oxygen to maintain the fire. The specific answer is that the balance of the 3 must be correct. Quantifying that, however, is a different matter.
No phosphorus is not necessary for fire to take place.The fire triangle or combustion triangle is a simple model for understanding the ingredients necessary for most fires.The triangle illustrates a fire requires three elements: heat, fuel and an oxidizing agent(usually oxygen).
Evaporation cools down a fire because as the water evaporates, it absorbs heat from the surrounding environment, including the fire itself. This heat absorption reduces the temperature of the fuel source and can help extinguish the fire by limiting the availability of heat necessary to sustain it.
Fuel, oxygen and heat or an ignition source are the components needed for a fire.
Fuel, Oxygen and Heat Fuel, Oxygen and Heat Fuel, Oxygen and Heat
When lightning strikes a tree, the intense heat generated can vaporize sap and moisture within the tree, creating steam that can cause the tree to explode. This explosion can then lead to a fire starting due to the ignition of the tree's dry and flammable fibers.
The three factors needed for a fire are heat, fuel and oxygen. Note that these are not elements in the chemical sense. (Oxygen is, but most fuels are compounds or mixtures, and heat is energy, not matter.)
To make a fire, you need three main things: fuel, heat, and oxygen. Fuel can be anything that burns, like wood or paper. Heat is necessary to ignite the fuel and start the fire. Oxygen is needed to sustain the combustion process.
In the fire triangle, coal is an example of a fuel component. Fuel is one of the three components necessary for a fire to occur, along with heat and oxygen. Coal provides the combustible material that can sustain and propagate a fire.