the yellow/safety flame - thats the one that burns less the blue flame - burns THE ROARING FLAME - that one burns a lot and you can tell the difference from the blue flame because it makes a roaring sound
A Bunsen burner produces heat and creates a heat source when doing an experiment. It uses methane and there is two flames a safety flame-you can put your hand through it without burning your hand and a roaring flame-this flame is blue and it is what you use when you preform an experiment.
Safety flame medium flame roaring flam
You can't it is always the same. You only use the blue flame to heat things because the yellow flame is the safety flame and the blue flame is hotter.
if you are talking about what flame to use on a Bunsen burner than the yellow flame is to make sure that everyone knows that there is a flame but the blue flame (less visible) is used as the hotter flame and the better one.
The blue flame is called a roaring flame and the yellow flame is called the safety flame.
the colour of the roaring flame is blue
A non luminous, roaring, blue flame. 🔥 🔥 🔥
The Blue Flame Will Be Noisier. The Yellow Flame Is Called A Safety Flame Because Everyone can See it. There Are Two Blue Flames: Medium Roaring The Roaring Flame Has A Blue Cone In The Middle Of The Flame And It Is The Hottest. It Also Has More Oxygen. But Overall, The Blue Flames Will Be Noisier Than The Yellow Flame.
When set to a roaring flame, there are what looks like cones of different shades of blue and orange. The hottest part of the flame, when set to roaring, is at the tip of the blue cone.
Oxidation
The maximal temperature is in the roaring blue flame - up to 700 0C.
The hottest part is the internal flame triangle in the blue flame (roaring blue flame) - up to 700 0C.
Guessing 'Y fflam las ruol'.
The two types of flames a Bunsen burner can produce are a luminous, yellow flame and a "roaring" blue flame. The blue flame is much hotter than the yellow flame.
The different flames are a) the luminous flame b) the blue flame c) the roaring flame The luminous flame is for safety and when the burner is not in use, should be left on it because you can see the flame becuase it is yellow. The hole must be closed for the luminous flame. The blue flame is generally used for expirements and is slightly weaker than the roaring flame. It can be gotten through opening the nole half-way. The roaring flame is only used in expirements when you need extra-strength becuase it is the hottest and most powerful flame. It is achevied through a fully opened hole.
A blue flame is neither too hot or too cold as somebody else has said. But the gentle blue flame is good for heating something up with a temperature that is between the yellow safety flame and the roaring blue flame.