Yes, things can burn in space, but the process is different than on Earth. Fire requires oxygen, and while space itself is a vacuum and lacks oxygen, combustion can occur in spacecraft or other environments where oxygen is present. In microgravity, flames behave differently, forming spherical shapes and burning more slowly due to the lack of buoyancy to draw in fresh oxygen.
It is not possible to burn a fire in outer space because fire requires oxygen to burn, and in the vacuum of space where there is no oxygen, there can be no combustion. On space missions, fires are not ignited but rather prevented through strict safety protocols and the use of non-flammable materials.
Yes, paper can burn in space, but it requires an external heat source and oxygen. In the vacuum of space, there is no oxygen to support combustion, so while paper can ignite if exposed to a flame or another heat source, it cannot burn spontaneously. In a controlled environment, such as a spacecraft where oxygen is present, paper can indeed catch fire and burn.
The rocket carries its own supply of oxygen with which to burn the fuel.
Rockets carry their own oxidizer to burn their fuel in space, as there is no oxygen available in space for combustion. The fuel and oxidizer react together in the rocket engine to produce thrust, allowing the rocket to move forward. This allows rockets to function in the vacuum of space where there is no atmospheric oxygen.
You might think a flare would not burn in a vacuum, however, they will. The oxygen for the flare to burn is already chemically in the flare. And flare guns HAVE gone into space- as emergency equipment.
Because they are going at very high speeds. Things cannot burn in space, because there is no oxegen.
They won't burn up but they will first roast the people inside then melt the space ship and then boil it. Fire needs three things to exist(Heat, Fuel, Oxygen.) In space there is no oxygen. That's why it can burn.
burn it burn it burn it burn it burn it burn it
In space there is no oxygen. Space is a vacuum. All things like a rocket going to space, require a fuel to burn, oxygen and a heater. Since there is no oxygen is space they need to provide it for them. Meaning the reaction can take place correctly.
you burn these things called ninots... they are things to make fun of political or famous things then they burn them. They also have thes big towers in between buldings that you can burn too.
Meteors do not burn in space. They burn when they dive throughEarth's atmosphere, because of friction with it.
It is not possible to burn a fire in outer space because fire requires oxygen to burn, and in the vacuum of space where there is no oxygen, there can be no combustion. On space missions, fires are not ignited but rather prevented through strict safety protocols and the use of non-flammable materials.
it can burn things
it can burn things
There may be 2 things that happen: 1.You may get in orbit around a planet and burn up in the atmosphere. 2. You may drift off into outer space.
Dry wood, fire, ect, oxygen, and a spark are things that are needed for fire to burn.
They don't. Meteors only burn when they enter the tmosphere, where the friction burns them up.