No
When something burns, it needs oxygen to stay alight. There is oxygen in the air, and that lets a flame keep burning. If you were to put a glass over a flame, a candle for example, the fire would go out once it had used all of the oxygen inside and turned it into carbon dioxide.
A hygrometer measures the moisture content of the air. There are several different types, all of which measure something else which indicates the moisture content.
all of these
The force of the syringe sucking up all the air into the cylinder causes it to displace and fill the space inside the cylinder once all the air has been removed. It needs something to fill the space of where the air was, such as blood, medicine and other liquids. The liquid inside the syringe displaces the air inside the cylinder.
It can't be entirely stopped, but it can be decreased significantly. Just need a little innovation, thats all.. Someone will figure out something eventually.
When something burns, it needs oxygen to stay alight. There is oxygen in the air, and that lets a flame keep burning. If you were to put a glass over a flame, a candle for example, the fire would go out once it had used all of the oxygen inside and turned it into carbon dioxide.
Sodium, Potassium, and Phosphorus all burn upon contact with air.
i really don't know at all maybe its a candle or something
this stupid website is so awful it will not answer anything I want it to answer. All I wanted to know was what elements are in the air in the candle and in the air when the candle burns? and they did not have it I thought it said that they would give u all the answers u need but I am not going on this website ever ever again
this stupid website is so awful it will not answer anything I want it to answer. All I wanted to know was what elements are in the air in the candle and in the air when the candle burns? and they did not have it I thought it said that they would give u all the answers u need but I am not going on this website ever ever again
It has used all the fuel or all the air, or it has been cooled below the ignition temperature or something has blocked the chemical reaction between fuel and oxygen.
It burns with oxygen. That's all.
when cut, they are all shiny like gold, but then tarnish immediately
The lyrics go something like "long night, all night, oh every night..." the answer to that would would be any way you want it by journey
Any substance that burns in air is likely to burn faster in pure oxygen, if all other conditions are equal.
We breathe it all the time.
Oxygen is the most reactive component of air. So for nearly all metals that burn in air only the oxide is formed. There is one exception magnesium burns in air to form the oxide and also traces of nitride.