Aluminium foil disintegrates in a convection oven because the heat rays of the oven hits the aluminium foil but gets reflected by the foil. Thus, the oven over heats and the aluminium foil disintegrates.
No. Convection currents are the circular motion of earth's wind. If the earth did not rotate, convection currents would not be. Does that make sense?
No, it would probably disintegrate.
Yes, it would.
Yes, it would.
I would not worry about the pipe. However the weed definitely does.
it would emit heat in the form of radiation. It will also heat the air which will cause convection. However, these heated gasses will be vented out of the flue so as not to contaminate the air in the room.
No, the sun's rays alone cannot ignite aluminum to set it on fire. High temperatures and a potential ignition source would be needed for aluminum to catch fire.
About 1500 years.
There is no specific temperature at which something would disintegrate people. Extreme heat can cause burns and tissue damage, while exposure to very low temperatures can lead to frostbite and hypothermia. However, disintegration of a person would typically require extreme conditions such as those found in a crematorium or under high-powered industrial processes.
The tree would probably disintegrate.
For an example if the question was what is a convection current you would say: I think a convection current is. And then you would tell your answer.
Disintegrate is the word used when things fall apart into unrecognizable bits. Lately, the science fiction novelist uses the word to describe annihilation by a lazer gun. "The old wooden desk was so fragile it looked like it would disintegrate at any second." "Proper fertilizer will disintegrate in water, creating the perfect medium for growing plants."