It will simply go out as fire needs to burn oxygen, too. You can see this. Empty and clean an aluminum soda can. Place a burning candle deep in a jar. Pour a teaspoon of hydrogen peroxide in the soda can. Cover and shake upright. Leave the liquid in the can while you slowly pour the carbon dioxide gas into the jar and it puts the candle out by pushing all the oxygen up and out.
because all things that burn need oxygen e.g when your bodies burn food down to glucose they need the oxygen from your lungs to burn down the food.
well it cant if there is not enough of air it will not light but if there is to much the balance goes wrong and it goes out
The flame will go out.
Yes, a burning candle is an example of an exothermic reaction. When the candle wax reacts with the oxygen in the air, it produces heat and light energy as byproducts. This release of heat is what makes the candle flame feel warm to the touch.
The word equation for a candle burning in the air is: Wax + Oxygen → Carbon Dioxide + Water + Light + Heat.
Oxygen is needed for burning. If there is no oxygen flame dies.
a candle won't light because there would be no convection currents, even if there is a plentiful supply of oxygen
When a candle burns the wax is reacting with oxygen in the air to give out heat and light.If you give the candle more oxygen then it will burn brighter ... but it will burn out more quickly.The burning of the candle (a chemical reaction) is affected by the number of oxygen molecules around it.So the speed of the chemical reaction is affected by the concentration of oxygen
If a candle has no oxygen, its flame goes out.
It goes out
Fire goes out.
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
It would stop burning if there was no oxygen.
The Smaller the jar the less oxygen, the bigger the jar the more oxygen, and since the candle lives of oxygen the biggest jar with the candle in it will take the longest to burn.
Burning is a process that uses up oxygen. When all the oxygen in the beaker is used up, the candle will go out.
The candle will cease to burn because oxygen is needed for burning. This is why one of the ways to extinguish a flame is to remove its source of oxygen, as described in the fire triangle.
You do not give us the conditions when the candle stops burning, but a guess would be that the candle is in a closed container. When the candle has used up the oxygen inside the closed container, it can no longer burn, and goes out.
If you burn a candle in the jar, it will use the oxygen as fuel and turn it into carbon dioxide. When the candle stops burning, the oxygen is gone.
Because candles need feul, oil, and oxygen to burn.Without oxygen it will burn out.
Yes, a burning candle is an example of an exothermic reaction. When the candle wax reacts with the oxygen in the air, it produces heat and light energy as byproducts. This release of heat is what makes the candle flame feel warm to the touch.