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Yes, most fires need oxygen to burn (combustion is a rapid form of oxidation). If there is no continuous supply of oxygen, a fire will go out.
incomplete combustion
a fire needs oxygen to burn and it will draw in oxygen from any were so if you light a fire at the end of the cave, and if it's big enough it will draw and bring oxygen through the tunnel/cave.
Fire requires three things: heat, fuel, and oxygen. If you take one of them away, then the fire will stop. By wrapping a heavy blanket around a burning object, it blocks oxygen in the air from getting to the fire and the fire goes out.
Fire needs oxygen no matter where it is. It is a chemical reaction between oxygen and some flammable substance. On Earth, the air is already 21% oxygen, so you only need to supply the fuel. In space there is no air and thus no oxygen, so you need to bring oxygen or some comparable oxidizer with you.
There was as much oxygen as there is outside today which meant the fire could spread much easier than without oxygen
Henry Aaron Isaacs has written: 'Our water supply (present and prospective) considered in relation to the protection of the city ofLondon from fire'
That the supply of oxygen for the fire
Control the fuel supply or oxygen supply to the fire.
Rockets need to carry a steady supply of oxygen so that the fire that takes them off of the ground can burn. You must remember that to have fire you must have oxygen.
Fire needs oxygen to continue burning. Water cuts of the supply of oxygen and hence the fire stops.
No. Adding oxygen to a fire will make it burn faster and hotter. In fact, one of the ways of putting out a fire is to cut off the supply of oxygen.
Yes, most fires need oxygen to burn (combustion is a rapid form of oxidation). If there is no continuous supply of oxygen, a fire will go out.
You get rid of the oxygen supply by smothering the fire with a a blanket or something.
It can if enough is properly applied.
incomplete combustion
give it a large constant supply of oxygen.