Oxygen
Set up a fire in the same box as the gas and see if the fire burns well. If it burns well, it is oxygen.
Fire, explosions, burns. And don't inhale the gas.
Neither... The wood is the fuel, but first it needs to become a gas. The gas is what burns.
Well a fire normally needs Gas Air and Oxygen so it burns when you turn the gas on the fire will automatically shows up because you are completing the triangle to make fire which is GAS+AIR+OXYGEN=fire
What burns in a wood fire is the gas inside the wood, and the heat breaks down particles in the wood, causing the bonds that were broken to release energy and the entire compound then combusted.
If you mean a residential gas fireplace, it would burn natural gas, which is mostly methane (CH4).
Because fire needs oxygen to burn and there is no oxygen inside the cylinder. It is almost impossible for the gas inside to catch fire.
Yes,it Does because it a gas that speed so it burns the seeds
In a gas fire, chemical potential energy in the natural gas is converted to thermal energy when ignited. The thermal energy then produces light and heat energy as the gas burns and releases energy in the form of heat and light.
yes if you pour gasoline on the top the gas is an oil, and will stay on the top of the water once the gasoline burns out, so will the fire
A fire burns.
Fire burns with the fire triangle. Heat, oxygen, and fuel (wood or gasoline).