The closer you can keep it near the flame, the less like for an accidental contamination of the plate.
-ice in a drink - flat iron
the yellow/safety flame - thats the one that burns less the blue flame - burns THE ROARING FLAME - that one burns a lot and you can tell the difference from the blue flame because it makes a roaring sound
if you are talking about what flame to use on a Bunsen burner than the yellow flame is to make sure that everyone knows that there is a flame but the blue flame (less visible) is used as the hotter flame and the better one.
No, the noun flame is usually a concrete noun, a word for a thing that can be seen, touched, sometimes smelled, and even measured for size and temperature; a flame is a physical thing. The noun flame is sometimes used in an abstract context, for example to refer to an 'old flame', or the 'flame of desire'. The word flame is also a verb (flame, flames, flaming, flamed).
You can't it is always the same. You only use the blue flame to heat things because the yellow flame is the safety flame and the blue flame is hotter.
50% for a sustainable flame.
Just not to add any aerated contaminant to the culture present in tube or Petri dish
Yes. Alcohol is very flammable.
Cool flame, yellow & orange
Heat rises.
you can heat it with flame and dip it in alcohol
alcohol is highly inflammable
Usually alcohol is used to make flame, or " Flambé"
Bunsen Burner: - Uses Gas - Achieves up to roaring blue flame - Used to melt solid objects Alcohol Lamp: - Uses Alcohol - Achieves Yellow flame only - Used to boil water
Generally ethanol is used.
Both needs flame to work
The flame orb applies burn to the Pokémon holding it. This is good for Pokémon with abilities like Guts or the move facade.