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 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 hottest part of a blue flame is typically at the tip of the inner cone. This is where complete combustion of the fuel is happening, resulting in higher temperatures compared to the outer parts of the flame.
The middle of a flame, also known as the inner core, contains the hottest part of the flame where combustion is most intense. It is primarily composed of ionized gas molecules and emits a blue color due to the high temperature.
The hottest part of a non-luminous flame is the inner cone, which is typically blue in color. This is where complete combustion of the fuel occurs, resulting in the highest temperatures.
The blue part of a flame is the hottest.
My teacher taught me it was the hottest at the end of the blue part of the flame.
The blue part of the flame, the cone in the middle is the hottest, the flame cools as it gets further away from the burning centre, this is similar to the sun where the outer surface of the sun is significantly cooler compared to the inside.
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 hottest part of a Bunsen flame is the blue inner cone.
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.
outer oxidising zone is the second most hottest part of burner flame....
The hottest part of a blue flame is typically at the tip of the inner cone. This is where complete combustion of the fuel is happening, resulting in higher temperatures compared to the outer parts of the flame.
No
The white colored flame is considered to be the hottest.
The inner part of the flame is the cone, which is the hottest part of the flame.
The blue portion of a flame is the hottest