Near the tip of a blue flame is the hottest.
Of a Bunsen Burner flame? Combustion takes place in all parts of the flame.
Noth African desrts
Bunsen -- not "bursen" -- the same who invented the Bunsen Burner. Two light sources are compared by holding a slip of paper between them. A small oil or grease spot on the paper becomes nearly invisible from both sides when the intensity is equal. If a sliding card is mounted on a meter stick the distances can be measured. The intensity ratio is the square of the distance ratio. This only works with light of the same color. You should try this as it is easy to do and gives surprisingly good results.
I believe that Piper is the hottest but that is just my opinion.
Haiti is the hottest country in the carabbean.
The inner blue part of the flame is the hottest on a Bunsen burner, as this is where complete combustion occurs due to the optimal air-to-gas ratio.
The hottest part of the flame on a Bunsen burner is at the tip of the inner blue cone. This part of the flame is where combustion is most complete, resulting in the highest temperature.
The white part of a flame on a Bunsen burner is called the inner cone. This part of the flame is the hottest and is where complete combustion of the fuel is occurring.
The tip of the blue cone is the hottest part of the Bunsen burner flame.
For heating water with a Bunsen burner, you would use a blue flame. This is the hottest part of the Bunsen burner flame and provides the most efficient heat transfer to the water.
in bunsen burner complete combustion takes place,it produces blue flame and blue region is the hottest part of a flame.so the whole flame is very hot,either the outermost part of flame.
No, blue is the hottest color on a Bunsen burner flame. The blue color indicates that the gas is burning efficiently and at a high temperature. Yellow in a Bunsen burner flame suggests incomplete combustion and lower temperatures.
The hottest part is where the flame is light blue or blue; which gradually turns to yellow as the flame is cooled by the colder outer air. When the safety flame (yellow) is on, the hottest point is the tip of this flame.
yes there is a flame at the top of a Bunsen burner. there are three different types light blue blue and yellow
the hottist part is the rouring flame and the light blue bit inside is the hottist the top of it
The blue part of the flame, the cone in the middle is the hottest, the flame cools as it gets further away from the burning centre, this is similar to the sun where the outer surface of the sun is significantly cooler compared to the inside.
The coldest part of a Bunsen burner flame is at the very base, where there is incomplete combustion due to lack of oxygen. The inner blue cone is the hottest part of the flame, while the outer yellow flame is cooler.