The temperature is higher than the melting point of the wax.
A candle burns by melting the wax. If the wax of one candle starts out colder than the wax of another, then the wax of the colder candle takes longer to get to it's melting point than the other.
Melting candle wax is a chemical change. Why? Because when you cook or burn candle wax it melts so it is a chemical change.
Candle wax are generally organic compounds. melting of candle wax is a physical property
You can only use melting wax for that
Candles contain organic compounds with low melting points.
The temperature is higher than the melting point of the wax.
A candle burns by melting the wax. If the wax of one candle starts out colder than the wax of another, then the wax of the colder candle takes longer to get to it's melting point than the other.
Melting candle wax is a chemical change. Why? Because when you cook or burn candle wax it melts so it is a chemical change.
Candle wax are generally organic compounds. melting of candle wax is a physical property
Melting candle wax is a chemical change. Why? Because when you cook or burn candle wax it melts so it is a chemical change.
Burning a candle is the process in which the wick is burnt. The wax is there to make the wick burn slower in order to let the candle burn for longer. Melting wax is part of the process but not burning the candle itself.
That depends on the solid: ice has a very low melting point, lard and butter have low melting points, chocolate has a relatively low melting point, wax has an intermediate melting point, lead has a high melting point, iron has a very high melting point, tungsten has an extremely high melting point.
i think its 100 --------- The range of the melting point is between 30 0C and 70 0C, depending on the material used. At a higher temperature the wax is thermally decomposed or ignited.
it will go into space
Melted/Melting.
The range of the melting point is between 30 0C and 70 0C, depending on the material used. At a higher temperature the wax is thermally decomposed or ignited.