it depends on how hot it is but if its really hot then it will melt faster in light then dark so maybe
The snow under the black paper will melt faster as the paper absorbs the heat while the white paper reflects it.
It could burn and melt the specimen
yes. if the flash light produces enough heat
No. You can't light a penny on fire. If you get it hot enough you can melt the penny but it won't really be on fire.
No.
Yes ,but you have to melt it at 3000'C
It depends upon the wattage of the light bulb. The lower the bulb wattage the lower the heat generated by the bulb. A 100 watt bulb should generate enough heat to destroy a rubber band.
The filament will melt AND MAYBE THE LAMP WILL EXPLODE
The bulb glows because the filament inside ( made of tungsten) get's so hot that it becomes red and starts emitting light. A little of it's heat is also radiated to the glass of the bulb and that's what makes it hot. But it will never get hot enough to melt a rubber band.
Under the right circumstances, yes. So will, for example, a 15 watt soldering iron. It just won't melt very much. It is not the wattage that determines the temperature, it is the insulation (or lack thereof) around the bulb and chocolate that determine it.
Coloured pencils have pigment embedded in the wax. When the pencil is rubbed against the paper, the tiny imperfections in the paper hold the wax that has the color. The principle is the same with wax crayons, but the pencil has much harder wax. To test this, colour a piece of paper with the pencil, then hold the drawing to a light bulb. You will find that the colours will "melt" with the heat and get a bit brighter. The wax was absorbed into the paper leaving the colour in the paper bits.
when HID bulbs blow up they can actually just be emitting the wrong kind of light. you can't see it but it is actually emitting powerful infared radiation. you can check for this by turning the bulbs to where they are supposed to be on and then placing a block of ice in front of the affected bulb. if the bulb is blown the ice will not melt. if it works, it will melt the ice
Coloured pencils have pigment embedded in the wax. When the pencil is rubbed against the paper, the tiny imperfections in the paper hold the wax that has the color. The principle is the same with wax crayons, but the pencil has much harder wax. To test this, colour a piece of paper with the pencil, then hold the drawing to a light bulb. You will find that the colours will "melt" with the heat and get a bit brighter. The wax was absorbed into the paper leaving the colour in the paper bits.
yes, unless you keep the temperature under 32 F degrees (0 C) the ice cube will melt.
It might, if the light bulb is giving off heat such that the place the ice-cube is in is warmer than the temperature of the surrounding area. Otherwise, no.
no.