The hottest part of a candle flame is typically the blue central core where complete combustion occurs. This part of the flame can reach temperatures of around 1400 degrees Celsius.
The tip of the blue cone at the base of a candle flame is typically the hottest part, reaching temperatures around 1400 degrees Celsius. The outer yellow part of the flame is cooler, serving as a buffer that prevents heat loss from the inner blue core.
The color in the candle flame shows the fuel used. It also shows temperature. The colder part of the flame is red and the closer the color is to white is the hottest. The blue color comes from the soot of the wick.
Around a flame is the atmosphere, which is cooler. The part of a flame able to get the hottest, then, is the part in the middle that is most protected from the outside cold, so the middle part of the flame is hottest.
The hottest part is where the flame is light blue or blue; which gradually turns to yellow as the flame is cooled by the colder outer air. When the safety flame (yellow) is on, the hottest point is the tip of this flame.
The inner blue part of the flame is the hottest on a Bunsen burner, as this is where complete combustion occurs due to the optimal air-to-gas ratio.
The flame of the candle is the hottest part, reaching temperatures of around 1400 degrees Celsius.
The tip of the blue cone at the base of a candle flame is typically the hottest part, reaching temperatures around 1400 degrees Celsius. The outer yellow part of the flame is cooler, serving as a buffer that prevents heat loss from the inner blue core.
Because it is the hottest zone of a candle flame.
Armpit is the hottest part.
The blue part of a flame is the hottest.
Hottest part is the piston crown....
The color in the candle flame shows the fuel used. It also shows temperature. The colder part of the flame is red and the closer the color is to white is the hottest. The blue color comes from the soot of the wick.
the hottest part in Maryse body is all.
Normally the part closest to the flame (the wax).
according to http://hypertextbook.com/facts/1999/JaneFishler.shtml The red center of the candle flame is about 800 C (1475 F) and the blue part of the outer core can be as hot as 1400 C (2500+ F).
My teacher taught me it was the hottest at the end of the blue part of the flame.
(summer) the hottest part of the day is 12 - 3:30 in the after noon. xx