red
The flame test for strontium - a strong red color.
NaCl will burn with a brick-red colour in a non-luminous Bunsen flame.
red
This depends on many things,2 of them are the tempreature of which your particular fire is burning by. Another thing which effects the colour of a flame is when you burn certain chemicals in a fire to perform flame tests. For example when a flame test is performed on Strontium(Sr2+)a scarlet red flame can be observed.
Strontium will produce different colours dependant on the circumstances. If the flame has oxygen and hydrogen present, the flame will be red. With chlorine in the flame it will be a brighter red. If it is the strontium atoms excited by themselves they produce a violet colour.
Strontium burns with a bright red color in a flame test.
You get and orange - yellow colour.
blue
Strontium and lithium are two elements whose compounds burn with a red flame and are commonly used in fireworks and signal flares. The strontium compound strontium nitrate and the lithium compound lithium carbonate are examples of substances that contribute to the red color in pyrotechnics.
With a shiny blue flame.
Strontium gives a crimson color in a flame test due to the excitation of its electrons. When strontium ions are heated, the energy from the flame excites the electrons to higher energy levels. As these electrons return to their ground state, they release energy in the form of light, which for strontium corresponds to a characteristic wavelength in the red part of the spectrum, resulting in a crimson color.
Strontium nitrate emits a bright red flame when it is burned.