The carbon found on Earth was present in the solar nebular from which the solar system formed. This carbon was formed as a result of the nuclear fusion processes which occur in stars as they leave the main sequence to become Red Giant stars.
These Red Giants expel part of their content as they die and this expelled stuff contain the carbon that they made. The expelled stuff eventually becomes part of a new star forming process.
Soot is the flaky black powder left over when wood or other organic substances are burned. Combustion breaks organic hydrocarbons down into carbon dioxide and water. Incomplete combustion will leave behind soot as carbon that was not fixed with oxygen to form CO2.
Elephants only! Elephants and sometimes fish, and that's all they do.
The carbon atoms in soot come from the gas that is being burned.
Soot comes from burning organic fuels. By definition, "organic" fuels contain carbon.
a partly carbon
Both amorphous carbon (lampblack) and graphite are used as black pigments.
When a carbon-containing fuel is burned, carbon-oxygen compounds are formed. If there's enough air, carbon dioxide will be formed. When the oxygen runs low you'll get carbon monoxide, and when it runs out you get pure carbon - soot. A blue flame has enough oxygen to convert all the carbon to CO2.
The fuel in the Bunsen burner is a compound of carbon and hydrogen. The hydrogen combines with the oxygen in air to form water leaving the carbon behind as the black substance.
Soot particles are the result of incomplete combustion of carbon or organic compounds.
Yes it is.
soot
Black soot can form on a funnel when there is incomplete combustion of fuel. This happens when the fuel does not have enough oxygen to fully burn, leading to the production of carbon particles. These carbon particles then adhere to the surface of the funnel, resulting in the formation of black soot.
Carbon is usually solid by itself under the allotropic form: diamond, soot and charcoal.
Both amorphous carbon (lampblack) and graphite are used as black pigments.
Diamond is an allotropic form, crystalline of carbon. Soots are also carbon, but noncrystalline and contain particles of organic compounds.
Mostly un-burned carbon in the form of a fine soot.
Graphite is not a metal. It's a form of Carbon, a non-metal.
Soot is the product of an incomplete combustion of carbon.
When a carbon-containing fuel is burned, carbon-oxygen compounds are formed. If there's enough air, carbon dioxide will be formed. When the oxygen runs low you'll get carbon monoxide, and when it runs out you get pure carbon - soot. A blue flame has enough oxygen to convert all the carbon to CO2.
Soot appears when there is an incomplete combustion of carbon. In fact, soot is just carbon but floated up as it becomes less dense.
Soot is primarily composed of Carbon. Four different types of particulate carbon can be identified in different types of soot, so getting more specific would require knowing what type of soot it was.
I assume you're asking about density when you say "substance." Take the example of carbon. In one form, it is a black powder (think soot). In its densest form it is diamond. A teaspoon of diamond has many more carbon atoms in it than a teaspoon of soot.