ATP
No, fire is chemical energy not nuclear
Fire is a chemical reaction that consumes fuel and releases heat and light. It does not have a physiological system like living organisms do to maintain stability and balance, which is what homeostasis is.
No, fire is an oxidation process that releases energy in the form of light and heat.
Fire is not a living organism because it does not possess cells, it cannot reproduce, it does not grow, and it cannot metabolize on its own. Fire is a chemical reaction that releases energy in the form of heat and light.
Chemical energy!
Fire is considered a nonliving thing because it does not have cells, reproduce, grow, or respond to stimuli like living organisms do. Fire is a chemical reaction that occurs when a fuel source combines with oxygen and reaches a high enough temperature to ignite.
Fire is a chemical reaction that involves the rapid oxidation of a material (such as wood or gas) with oxygen in the air. This process releases energy in the form of heat and light, making fire a form of chemical energy transformation.
Chemical and heat energy.* * A campfire converts chemical energy to heat energy.
Wood contains potential energy stored in its chemical bonds, whereas a burning fire releases this energy as heat and light through a chemical reaction called combustion. Consequently, the energy in the wood is transformed into thermal and radiant energy when the fire burns.
Thermal energy is Heat and heat can burn you, set things on fire, melt things, and even kill living organisms
Radiant energy is exothermic energy. Fire is a chemical reaction that produces heat. This heat is released as a result of the exothermic chemical reaction.
Not quite. Heat is a result of combustion, but fire is actually chemical energy.