No, a liter does however burn faster due to the fact that it is burning butane rather than wood.
That's similar to asking, "Why is a boulder heavier than a pebble?" Flames from a larger fire are more concentrated and fuel needing, just like the sun is bound to be a lot hotter than a spark. Fire temperatures vary greatly and generally the larger the fire the hotter. There are rare exceptions, however.
Exactness. A computer is going to be more accurate than a human trying to match by eye.
In Microsoft Excel, these options are available to help you narrow down your results.Match case typically means matching the capitalization. For example if your search term is hello, the contents of cells "hello", "hello there" will match, but the contents of "HELLO", and "Hello Kitty" will not match because the case (capitalization) does not match.Match entire cell contents. Only the cells which completely match your search terms will be returned. If your search term is "hello", then the cell contents of "hello" and "HELLO" will match your search, but "hello there" and "Hello Kitty" will not match.If both are checked then only the cell with the content "hello" will match your search.If none of those boxes are checked than "hello", "HELLO", "hello there" and "Hello Kitty" will all match the search.
You matches have to be short enough, I think it has to be less than five minutes long. At the end of the match, when it shows the winner and the stats, you will see a "Z replay" icon. Press Z, and it will let you save your match.
Certainly; a person running a fever will be hotter than normal, hence, both hot and feverish. There are, of course, other contexts and meanings of the word hot, which would not be synonymous with feverish. Angelina Jolie is hot.
No, a yellow flame is colder than a blue flame.
its hotter than a yellow flame
The answer depends on hotter than WHAT!
It's hotter than the yellow flame.
Yes, the boiling water has more heat than the match flame.
That's similar to asking, "Why is a boulder heavier than a pebble?" Flames from a larger fire are more concentrated and fuel needing, just like the sun is bound to be a lot hotter than a spark. Fire temperatures vary greatly and generally the larger the fire the hotter. There are rare exceptions, however.
It isn't. The inner (blue) part is the hottest.
gas flame
Assuming we're not throwing ions into the flame and the color is due strictly to temperature, the blue flame is hotter.The problem is that flames can be different colors for reasons other than temperature. Specifically, they may contain ionized materials with strong emission lines that color the flame. Probably the easiest example to observe using ordinary household materials is sodium which gives an orangish yellow color (easily seen by dropping a few crystals of table salt into the flame of a gas stove).The reason that hotter flames are blue is that blue light is more energetic than red light. A hotter flame has more energy, and therefore generates more energetic light.
A blue flame is hotter than a yellow flame because a blue flame has more oxygen, so it has more energy to create extra heat. Therefore, a blue flame is more dangerous and a yellow flame is used in laboratories. The hottest part of the blue flame is right under the middle, this part is called the crown !!
No, yellow is hotter. The progression, from least hot to hottest, goes: black-red, dark red, bright red, light red, orange, yellow, blue, white-yellow, white.
Orange flames are ho