yes
true
true.
True. Our air is 78.08% nitrogen, 20.95% oxygen, 0.93% argon, 0.038% carbon dioxide, and traces of hydrogen, helium and about 1% water vapor.
true
The formation of ammonia from nitrogen may be spontaneous, but enthalpy alone can't be used to make that decision
True, fire must have oxygen to burn.
No. It would be very bad for us if they did, ad out atmosphere is mostly nitrogen and oxygen. Nitrogen will react with oxygen, but only at high temperatures, and the process actually absorbs more energy than it gives out.
If a liquid is flammable it will burn. Flammable means can catch on fire.
It Can Burn But It Is Fiscally Impossible For Sex Too Be On Fire
No, but someones pants got on fire (True thing)
No
nitrification or nitrogen fixation. aslo is know as False.
Definitely yes.... Fire needs oxygen to burn... If that specific place in which fire is burning, runs out of oxygen, the flames will get extinguished. You can try this by covering a burning candle with an airtight box...
No it is not true. Plants cannot fix nitrogen. Bacteria do the job
Il n'y a pas de fumée sans feu.
I'd have to say it's fire because if you burn(fire) sand(ground)then it turns to glass which is delicate. in other words fire turns sand into glass which is easy to break.(true fact)
true