A fire burn consumes your skin as fuel and would keep going until the fuel is gone or it is deprived of oxygen. A steam burn is just water or a liquid that has a lot of thermal energy that it wants to transfer to something that is colder (like your skin). A fire burn would persist, while a steam burn would just get it's thermal energy sapped out and condense into a liquid.
An electric fire has a wattage of between 1 and 3 kw depending on the model - a light bulb can be anywhere between 40 and 120w.So an electric fire is a lot hotter.Another AnswerIf, by 'hotter', are referring to temperature, then lamps operate at a far higher temperature than an electric fire (white hot vs red hot!). If, by hotter, you are referring to the amount of energy consumed, then electric fires win!
The mantle is hotter than the crust.
I think so
No. None of the planets is hotter than the sun.
Fire.
Hotter Than Fire was created on 2011-11-02.
yep,
yep,
No, the color of a flame is determined by the temperature at which a material burns. Blue flames are typically hotter than orange flames because they burn at a higher temperature.
Smoke travels upward due to differences in temperature and density between the smoke particles and the surrounding air. As the smoke is hotter and less dense than the surrounding air, it rises. This movement is also influenced by the natural convection process, where the hotter air at the bottom of the smoke column rises as it cools and disperses at the top.
fish pellets
That's similar to asking, "Why is a boulder heavier than a pebble?" Flames from a larger fire are more concentrated and fuel needing, just like the sun is bound to be a lot hotter than a spark. Fire temperatures vary greatly and generally the larger the fire the hotter. There are rare exceptions, however.
Yes, magma is hotter than fire. Magma is molten rock found beneath the Earth's surface, with temperatures reaching up to 1300-2400°F, while fire is a chemical reaction that emits heat and light, typically with temperatures up to around 1000-1800°F.
hotter than the sun, of course.
Smoke rises because it is hotter and less dense than the air around it. The chimney is designed to create a draft that pulls the smoke up and out of the fireplace, preventing it from flowing back into the room. This draft is created by the temperature difference between the inside and outside of the chimney.
No, not at all. There can be heat without flame. Something can smolder and put out more smoke than something that is at a rolling fire.
o yes she is soooooo hot amazing and sexy