Carbonite explodes because the mixture of ingredients are volatile and when exposed to to something like fire with be set off. It is commonly used in the mining industry.
Carbonite is represented by CO2-2. It is an ion, not an element, nor should it be mistaken for the covalently bonded compound CO2, carbon dioxide.
Either somebody shoots at the star. Or kills the star turning it into a supernova.
It doesn't explode it sparks rigid metal(notched metal) causes flint to spark when hit
There are pressurised gases in the canister. The heat causes the canister to explode.
Manganese dioxide is a catalyst for the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide.
I like carbonite
It would be unlikely for a solid material to be made entirely of pure carbonite because carbonite is not a naturally occurring element. Carbonite is a fictional substance from the Star Wars universe and does not have real-world properties.
Carbonite is represented by CO2-2. It is an ion, not an element, nor should it be mistaken for the covalently bonded compound CO2, carbon dioxide.
That's how they spread their seed.
Han Solo was the character who was frozen in carbonite
There is none. Carbonite is a private company which has not gone public offering stock, yet.
the wire that heats blows
Either somebody shoots at the star. Or kills the star turning it into a supernova.
yes, carbonite is real. If you have watched the star wars movies and when han solo was frozen in carbonite. Its possible but they haven't perfected it for humans just yet
No, low pressure in a tornado does not cause buildings to explode. That is a common myth.
They are privately owned.
David Beeler