The moment the match stick catches fire when it is given friction from the match box, the temperature would be around 2500oC.
mercury
By lighting a match, and ignighting the worms in the soil as fuel.
Cause fuel burns hot, and hot things heat things.
Bromine is a liquid at room temperature. If you were to touch it, it would feel like water, except that it is toxic and causes burns.
From what I've heard, it burns consistently at a temperature of 30 degrees celsius, but can burn hotter when in dry air.
Among other things:* You'll no longer have a match stick.* The wood of the match stick will convert to smoke; among other things, CO2 will be produced.* In the process, some oxygen will be used up.
The head of the match where the flammable material is located is usually the first part of the match stick to catch on fire.
Because of lower ignition temperature of the chemical applied on match stick.
The red tip is actually a chemical called Phospsorous. It burns when we rub it against the face of the match stick.
physical change because it is still wood, just charred
A match burns to produce fire. It burns because of the reaction between the sulfur in the match and the object it is striking.
which gas burns at a very high temperature
A match contain a stick (from wood or paper) and a head with the active components.
With a match stick :)
the match stick dude, who else
Phosphorus and sulfur.
Chemical energy in your body to the Gravitational Potential Energy of the match stick.