The flame test for strontium - a strong red color.
Magnesium burns bright white.
Calcium Chloride burns a deep orange with a slightly lighter orange core and has a light red glow at the top. The colour calcium chloride burns is described as brick red.
green
With a shiny blue flame.
When you burn lithium chloride, or any other lithium salt, you get a crimson flame, due to the positive lithium ions. The heat from burning the substance excites the outer electrons of the lithium ions to higher energy levels, when they drop back to the ground state, energy is released as light, and the wavelength of that light corresponding to that drop is crimson, hence we see a crimson flame.
red
When Magnesium chloride is burnt in a Bunsen flame, it imparts no colour in the flame.
A bright green color is imparted to the flame by copper chloride
Strontium nitrate emits a bright red flame when it is burned.
A better question would be "which elements burn red", as more than one element burns red. Lithium chloride burns red, calcium chloride burnds a red-orange, and strontium chloride burns bright red.
Magnesium burns bright white.
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.
You get and orange - yellow colour.
Calcium Chloride burns a deep orange with a slightly lighter orange core and has a light red glow at the top. The colour calcium chloride burns is described as brick red.
blue
green
Iron is a sort of sparkly-black when it is burned.