because the wax keeps the flame kinda like fire and paper but it goes slower because the wax is to thick but it tends to melt
the products of a burning candle are water vapor and carbon dioxide
The air comes through the right opening instead of the left opening because hot air from the candle leaves via the left opening.
No, burning a candle is not reversible. When a candle is burned, the wax is melted and the wick is consumed, resulting in irreversible changes to the candle's structure.
A burning candle produces thermal energy and light.
a burning candle is a light source due to the fire.
An unattended burning candle can lead to fires if left near flammable materials or if the flame spreads. It could also cause injuries if pets or children come too close to the flame. Additionally, the candle could burn out completely and leave a hot ember or wax puddle unattended.
A burning candle produces water vapor and carbon dioxide gas.
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.
Candle wax evaporates when the candle is burning because the heat from the flame causes the wax to melt and turn into a gas, which then evaporates into the air.
combustion is burning -_-
Burning the Candle - 1917 was released on: USA: 5 March 1917
An exothermic reaction involves the release of heat into a system. The burning of a candle is combustion reaction. Combustion reaction release heat, and this can be detected and measured by the burning of a candle's wax. From these testable observations it is determined fact that candle burning is indeed exothermic.