Blue or lavender.
Xenon is typically used in commercial lighting applications to produce a blue glow when excited by electricity, rather than a flame color.
Strontium burns with a bright red color in a flame test.
Natural gas burns with a blue flame due to its high concentration of methane. The blue color is a result of complete combustion, indicating that the fuel is burning efficiently.
It burns a distinct bright orange/red color which is unique to hydrogen alone.
Potassium burns with a purple flame.
Xenon is typically used in commercial lighting applications to produce a blue glow when excited by electricity, rather than a flame color.
Helium does not burn in a flame test because it is an inert gas and does not react with the flame to produce a characteristic color.
A pink color from the spectral lines of lithium.
A lilac-violet color
Strontium burns with a bright red color in a flame test.
Red
Lilac to Purple-Red
Depending on the metal in the chloride (Na, Ca, Sr, Li, ....).
Cesium burns with a lilac or bluish-violet flame in a flame test.
When Magnesium chloride is burnt in a Bunsen flame, it imparts no colour in the flame.
the color of the flame produced when you burn rubidium is tha same color OS what potassium produce-the colour violet
Orangish yellow