Yes, the Sun starts many fires. It can happen when a thrown away glass bottle acts as a lens.
Wood catches on fire when it reaches its ignition temperature, typically around 300°C (570°F), causing the wood to release flammable gases. These gases mix with oxygen in the air, creating a combustible mixture that ignites. Once ignited, the wood continues to burn as long as there is a continuous supply of oxygen, heat, and fuel.
The sun doesn't have oxygen inside it; it consists mainly of hydrogen and helium. As it continues to burn fuel through nuclear fusion, it will eventually reach the end of its life cycle and expand into a red giant before shedding its outer layers to form a planetary nebula, leaving behind a dense core called a white dwarf.
Sun Crest 776 is a version of the Sun Crest catalyst in the game Genshin Impact. It increases Pyro damage by 20/25/30/35/40% for 6 seconds after using an Elemental Burst. Its element is Pyro, which means it enhances Pyro (fire) abilities and damage.
Both wood and coal are derived from organic matter that originally came from plants. This organic matter stored energy from the sun through photosynthesis, which is then released when the wood or coal is burned as fuel.
See, I don't exactly know if this is correct or not. The suns energy is mechanical energy and it shines down on some wood and starts heating it up. the wood starts burning and that is chemical energy. Check with someone else to make sure it is correct.
No. Since fires are most often built at night it is not reasonable that they need sunlight. However, when you burn wood the energy which makes the fire hot was stored by the tree the wood came from, and this energy came from sunlight. In this sense fires need sun.
Yes you can. It is very hot and sunny there most of the time.
well if you get too close to the sun you will suddenly catch fire and burn like coal as if you were a grape to turn into a raisin.
NO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! A "fire comet" would burn up when it gets anywhere near the sun! even if it did exist!!!!
The sun emits heat and light, which can cause objects to heat up and potentially ignite if the conditions are right. However, the sun does not burn like a fire, as it is a giant nuclear fusion reactor that gives off energy through nuclear processes. So, while the sun can cause things to burn, it doesn't "burn" them in the traditional sense.
The sun looks like a big ball of fire. Fire flames up from the sun and is like lava. You cant stare at the sun because you can go blind. The sun is red,orange,yellow all mixed!!!! The sun is the closest star to the earth. It has to be the perfect distents away or the earth will burn up
You can use the light from the sun
the electrical bar fire
They cut wood and then used Piggy's glasses to reflect the sun so the wood would catch fire.
The Sun will not "burn out" like a wood fire might; instead, near the end of its life, the Sun will expand into a red giant star, and will expand so much that it will engulf the planets Mercury and Venus, and possibly the Earth as well. After that, it will slowly shrink down to a white dwarf star, and will probably last for the remainder of the lifetime of the universe.That is not expected to happen for another four billionyears or so, so there's no worry for us.
Wood catches on fire when it reaches its ignition temperature, typically around 300°C (570°F), causing the wood to release flammable gases. These gases mix with oxygen in the air, creating a combustible mixture that ignites. Once ignited, the wood continues to burn as long as there is a continuous supply of oxygen, heat, and fuel.
We will be burn just like sun burn