No. Candles are not hot enough to melt a quarter. Some friends and i tried with a propane flame and were unsuccessful. It turned red hot but there was no melting.
Before the wax can turn liquid, it has to be heated to a certain tempurature, which is called it's melting point. The warmer the candle is to begin with, the faster it will melt, and therefore, the colder it is to begin with, the slower it will melt.
The candle burns with a single flame.
Not really. The candle would have molecules, but the flame falls under energy and would break down to quanta.
wax do not freeze on top of the candle because the heat on top of the candle makes it melt and as we know heat makes solid melt.
An example would be the flame causing the wax to melt.
the heat of the hot flame is transferred to the colder candle hey brookie bee i hope this helps i got it from study island good luck :)
the heat of the hot flame is transferred to the colder candle hey brookie bee i hope this helps i got it from study island good luck :)
No. Candles are not hot enough to melt a quarter. Some friends and i tried with a propane flame and were unsuccessful. It turned red hot but there was no melting.
Candle warmers are electric devices used to heat wax candles to melt them and release their aroma. Benefits of using candles warmers are that there is no fire hazard from an open flame, because candle warmers do not have a flame. This also means that there is no soot from the burning wick, which leaves for a cleaner candle.
The flame of a candle is a source of light.
No if the candle not lit it probably won't melt
A candle flame is seen because it consists of glowing gases.
the candle uses up the oxygen and in doing so creates carbon dioxide. Eventually there will be more carbon dioxide than oxygen and it will snuff out the flame
well both an animal and a flame candle need oxygen to survive
because the wax keeps the flame kinda like fire and paper but it goes slower because the wax is to thick but it tends to melt
Before the wax can turn liquid, it has to be heated to a certain tempurature, which is called it's melting point. The warmer the candle is to begin with, the faster it will melt, and therefore, the colder it is to begin with, the slower it will melt.