Burning magnesium will result in a brilliant white light.
Cupric sulfate burns with a green flame.
Magnesium sulfate is not flammable; by heating it is thermally decomposed.
Greenish
Strontium burns with a bright red color in a flame test.
In qualitative analysis, flame tests are used in confirming what kind of metal is present in a solution. The green flame or bluish-green flame color is usually present whenever copper metal is present in a solution.
When Magnesium chloride is burnt in a Bunsen flame, it imparts no colour in the flame.
Cupric sulfate burns with a green flame.
Magnesium sulfate is not flammable; by heating it is thermally decomposed.
An intense white flame is produced when magnesium burns.
Greenish
No color. When burning chlorine, the flame gains no additional color from the chlorine. Examples of this may be found by burning Aluminum chloride or Magnesium chloride, both of which burn colorless. This means that Chlorine contributes no color to the flame.
Helium does not burn in a flame test because it is an inert gas and does not react with the flame to produce a characteristic color.
it gets really bright.
A pink color from the spectral lines of lithium.
A lilac-violet color
Strontium burns with a bright red color in a flame test.
Red