If you were a scientist, and was in a lab, and you messed with some things, I'm sure you could.
Unless it's a chemical change instead of physical...
a personal observation from your journal
No, as in the popular old book "Fahrenheit 451", the ignition temperature of plain paper as you might see in a text book is 451 degrees Fahrenheit.
The sun, lamps, candles, and ect.
bulb light burned out every 4 months.type of bulb is H7
A spectrometer analyzes the light given off when an element is burned.
That depends upon how severely the tongue has been burned, but in my experience, if I have burned my tongue I recover within a day at the most.
NO
because it does not have moistire so it sink an paper is burned unless it is in the sun
You can reduce the amount of paper that is sent to landfill or from being burned by simply recycling it. Most places near where you live have recycling bins for paper.
Nope. It has undergone a chemical change, and is no longer paper.
It's obvious, paper come from trees so they turn into ash.
If you want to print text/graphics onto paper, you need a printer.
It turns to ash
When the filter paper is burned some 'ash' will be left behind.
Burning is a chemical process, not a property.
Is it true or false that all citations of sources in the text of your paper should reference the reader to a reference at the end of the paper always?
To recover the precipitate.