Combustion chamber
Combustion chamber
the answer is b cylinder just took the test its not the combustion chamber
The area is called the combustion chamber.
gasoline is matter, it is burned to create energy
Fuel and air are mixed in the carburettor and the gas is drawn into the cylinder combustion chamber by the valves. The spark ignites the mixture pushing the valves down and turning the cam shaft, hence "internal combustion". Therefore it is "combustion chamber".
Gasoline is an example of stored chemical energy. The hydrocarbons in gasoline store energy in their chemical bonds, which is released when the fuel is burned to power engines.
Combustion chamber.
After the air filter, the air goes into the cylinder as a mixture with the fuel to be burned.
Gasoline is a mixture of hydrocarbons. As gas is burned, the compounds are broken down into simplier compounds and the breaking of these compounds releases energy.
An internal combustion engine is one where a gas/air mixture is ignited and burned in a closed cylinder, and forces a piston to move. In other words, all piston engines in cars, trucks, bikes aircraft.
Gasoline or diesel. In some rare engines ethanol is burned, of a mixture of gasoline and ethanol. Coming up with this answer would've been easier than posting this question here. If this is for your homework, then try actually using your brain, that's what this is about. Not wether you finished it or not.
Gasoline, until it was discovered it had uses in engines such as those for cars