Robinson Crusoe heats his crowbar in the fire to make it easier to bend and shape for his various tasks and needs on the deserted island where he is stranded. Heating the crowbar in the fire softens the metal, making it more malleable and easier to work with.
You can remove heat from a fire by cutting off its oxygen supply, using a fire extinguisher, or dousing it with water. Removing the heat source or covering the fire with a non-flammable material can also help extinguish the fire by reducing heat.
no, a lot of heat is not fire because for an example if there was a really hot day that does not mean theres is going to be a fire or it is a fire
Fire.
Fire, all fire, every fire consists of 3 things: Heat, Fuel & Oxygen. When all 3 are together in the right mix you have fire, if one or more elements is not sufficient then you cannot have fire. You therefore need as much heat as necessary along with the fuel & oxygen to maintain the fire. The specific answer is that the balance of the 3 must be correct. Quantifying that, however, is a different matter.
Not quite. Heat is a result of combustion, but fire is actually chemical energy.
Contained, or wild fire there is going to be a lot of heat .
Evaporation cools down a fire because as the water evaporates, it absorbs heat from the surrounding environment, including the fire itself. This heat absorption reduces the temperature of the fuel source and can help extinguish the fire by limiting the availability of heat necessary to sustain it.
fire is the effect of excessive heat. So naturally where sufficient amount of heat & fuel & oxygen is available then a chemical reaction takes place causing heat , that is called fire .So the fire is hot.
feat feae fiae fire
Heat is primarily transferred through convection, where hot air rises from the fire and carries heat to the firefighter. Radiation is also a method where the fire emits infrared radiation that can directly heat the firefighter's body.
steel wool burns in oxegen and produces heat and light
It can reflect the visible light of a fire, and the heat.