This really depends upon the kind of gas you are talking about. Nitrogen is a gas, and it does not react with oxygen at normal temperatures. Methane does react very readily with oxygen, although even then, you would need some kind of spark to set it off. A methane oxygen mixture does not so much burst into flames, as explode. It would burn all at once.
yup. you would burst into flames and evaporate.
Vapour.Notes would burst into flames, whereas coins would melt.
it would burst
either it will burst into flames or it will explode
That depends on how fine the powder is. if it is like sand, it probably wont burn that easily, but if it is as fine as flour, then it will burst into flames in 1 second
the building would burst into flames because no one building can contain that much awsomeness
If the world suddenly burst into flames, it would be catastrophic. The intense heat from the flames would likely lead to widespread destruction of cities, forests, and ecosystems, causing loss of life and displacement of populations. The environmental impact would be severe, affecting air quality, climate patterns, and biodiversity.
No, because any flame has heat , and if you try to freeze it , the freezing agent would either: a) melt the freezing agent...... b) burst it into flames...... c) or both.
Water would enter the cell via osmosis and it would finally burst.
Water would diffuse into the cells of the jellyfish, causing it to bloat up and possibly burst.
Well that is not the best idea because 1 you would start you cloths on fire 2 you would set you microwave on fire But it would kill the bedbugs if they both items burst into flames!
A blue flame would indicate ethane burning in excess oxygen. Blue flames are typically associated with complete combustion and sufficient oxygen supply during the burning process.