blue
No, the color of a flame is determined by the temperature at which a material burns. Blue flames are typically hotter than orange flames because they burn at a higher temperature.
Yes, red is typically hotter than orange in terms of flame colors. The color of a flame can indicate the temperature of the fire, with red flames often being cooler than orange flames.
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.
Yes, typically a red flame is hotter than a yellow flame. The color of a flame is determined by the temperature of the burning material. In general, hotter flames appear bluer or white, while cooler flames tend to appear yellow or red.
Green flames are typically not as hot as blue flames, but are hotter than red or orange flames.
The hotter the flame, the less color (and light) given off. Bright, yellow flames are the result of carbon that has not been burned, where blue flames indicate a near total burning of the fuel. Other chemicals present in the wood can color flames- sometimes added for the appearance- red, yellow, blue, green.
That depends on what is being burned. paper for instance, burns at 451 degrees farenheir wheras things like coal burn with hotter flames.
No, coals are not hotter than flames. Flames are the visible, hot gases released during the combustion of a material, while coals are the solid remains of a material that has completed the combustion process. Flames are typically hotter than coals because they represent the active burning process.
The hotter the temperature the darker the colour and the colder the temperature the brighter/more blue the colour so if it is going to be hot some where when you look on a weather radar then it will be darker in that are and if it is colder it will be brighter/more blue.
A green flame is typically not as hot as blue or white flames, but hotter than red or orange flames.
blue flames are hotter
The temperature of an orange flame on a Bunsen burner is typically around 1,100 degrees Celsius (2,010 degrees Fahrenheit). The color of the flame is an indication of the temperature, with blue flames being hotter than yellow or orange flames.