When a burning candle is covered with a glass, the oxygen within the covered space gets depleted as the flame consumes the available oxygen. Without sufficient oxygen, the candle flame is unable to sustain combustion and gets extinguished.
A burning candle goes off when covered by a glass cup because it uses up the available oxygen in the cup, creating a sealed environment with no oxygen for the flame to continue burning. This causes the flame to extinguish due to the lack of oxygen needed for combustion.
The blackening of the glass rod is due to the deposition of soot (carbon) from the candle flame onto the surface of the glass rod. This is a physical change where the soot particles adhere to the glass surface but do not chemically alter the glass itself.
The burning flame on a candle needs three things to continue burning: 1) fuel, which it gets from the wick 2) heat, which comes from lighting the candle 3) oxygen Without any one or more of these three things, the candle will no longer continue to burn. In the case where a candle is covered with a glass, the candle quickly uses up the oxygen inside the glass. once all of the oxygen is gone, the flame will burn out.
When a candle is placed inside a glass of water, the water absorbs the heat produced by the flame. This heat causes the water to evaporate and rise above the flame, creating the illusion that the candle is burning inside the water. In reality, the candle is burning above the water level.
When you cover the top of a glass with a burning candle inside, you restrict the flow of oxygen to the flame. This causes the flame to consume the available oxygen within the glass, leading to the extinguishing of the flame due to lack of oxygen. Additionally, the heat and gases produced by the burning candle may build up within the glass.
A burning candle goes off when covered by a glass cup because it uses up the available oxygen in the cup, creating a sealed environment with no oxygen for the flame to continue burning. This causes the flame to extinguish due to the lack of oxygen needed for combustion.
The blackening of the glass rod is due to the deposition of soot (carbon) from the candle flame onto the surface of the glass rod. This is a physical change where the soot particles adhere to the glass surface but do not chemically alter the glass itself.
The burning flame on a candle needs three things to continue burning: 1) fuel, which it gets from the wick 2) heat, which comes from lighting the candle 3) oxygen Without any one or more of these three things, the candle will no longer continue to burn. In the case where a candle is covered with a glass, the candle quickly uses up the oxygen inside the glass. once all of the oxygen is gone, the flame will burn out.
A red candle, or a candle with a red glass cover, called the "presence candle" is used in the sanctuary to represent the presence of the Holy Spirit, it is usually never extinguished.
it is lit
When a candle is placed inside a glass of water, the water absorbs the heat produced by the flame. This heat causes the water to evaporate and rise above the flame, creating the illusion that the candle is burning inside the water. In reality, the candle is burning above the water level.
When you cover the top of a glass with a burning candle inside, you restrict the flow of oxygen to the flame. This causes the flame to consume the available oxygen within the glass, leading to the extinguishing of the flame due to lack of oxygen. Additionally, the heat and gases produced by the burning candle may build up within the glass.
The candle burning in the open will burn longer, because it has easy access to oxygen to sustain the reaction. The flame of the candle burning under the jar will go out quickly, since it will use up its available oxygen faster than the oxygen can be replenished. Even if the jar is open at the bottom, the heat, carbon monoxide, and carbon dioxide produced by the flame will prevent sufficient oxygen from getting to the flame to feed it.
Some tools used in observing a burning candle include a lighter or matches to ignite the candle, a ruler or measuring tool to gauge the height of the candle as it burns, a stopwatch or timer to track the burning time, and a magnifying glass to observe the flame in greater detail.
Lifting the glass tumbler placed over a burning candle to a height of 1cm could disrupt the airflow around the candle, affecting its ability to receive oxygen. This may cause the candle flame to flicker, decrease in size, or even extinguish depending on how much air is allowed to reach the flame.
the candle will go out because oxygen helps in burning but a burning substance produces carbon dioxide but when we put a glass upon can carbon will heavier than oxygen and when oxygen will less candle will go out
Putting a glass jar on a candle can create a greenhouse effect that traps heat, potentially causing the glass to crack or shatter from the heat. It can also increase the risk of a fire starting if the candle is left unattended. It is not safe to place a glass jar directly over a burning candle.