Oxygen (O2) is required for combustion.
Oxygen is the element in the air that is needed for coal dust to burn. When coal dust is exposed to oxygen and heat, it can ignite and burn.
No. If you burn an element, you will turn it into a compound (most commonly [element burnt] oxide). Which will not be an element.
A dry burn occurs when an electronic heating element is activated without any liquid or material to vaporize present on the coil. This can be done with a quick pulse of the fire button to burn off any residue on the coil. It is important to only dry burn coils on devices designed for it, as excessive dry burning can lead to damage or release harmful chemicals.
Helium was named after the sun Helios.
i think lightning
As well as petrol you need oxygen and an ignition source
Sulfur is the element present in impurities in fossil fuels that can produce sulfur dioxide when the fuel burns.
The present infinitive for "burn" is "to burn."
The present infinitive of burn is "to burn" (burned; burnt).
Cars need to burn to burn something in order to make energy. And gas does just that!
no as it will burn out the element
No it doesn't make something burn. But if something is already burning, it supports the burning. In the fire triangle, which is what makes a fire, it says that you need fuel, oxygen, and something else, that I tend to forget. So, technically, oxygen does make something burn, because you need that oxygen to help it and if you don't have that then it won't burn. So, I say yes, it does.
Oxygen
Oxygen is the element in the air that is needed for coal dust to burn. When coal dust is exposed to oxygen and heat, it can ignite and burn.
No. If you burn an element, you will turn it into a compound (most commonly [element burnt] oxide). Which will not be an element.
The oven element can burn out due to factors such as overuse, high temperatures, physical damage, or manufacturing defects.
Burning already is the present participle of burn.