chemical potential
Fire releases heat and carbon dioxide. The carbon depends on how the fire is burnt. Unburnt hydrocarbons are released if fire is not complete.
A fire produce water, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, ash, smoke, etc.Thermal energy is not a chemical substance.
I cant
Because fire in itself is not a ball of nuclear fusion reactions which is what the stars in every solar system are, which produces UV radiation, a fire is just heat and not a nuclear reaction.
carbon dioxide(co2) BUT... if there must me not enough oxygen then the produced gas is carbon monoxide(co)
chemical potential
The lowest temperature at which fire can still be produced is around 600 degrees Celsius (1,112 degrees Fahrenheit).
Smoke inhalation of gasses produced by the fire.
Huh? I don't think that there is an oxide produced. Fire is a rapid oxidation of a fuel though. The only things that are produced are heat, light, and unburned products of incomplete combustion (IE: smoke).
It depends what is being produced.
The temperature of a fire produced from burning wood can vary, but typically ranges from 600 to 900 degrees Celsius (1,112 to 1,652 degrees Fahrenheit).
Only about 15 Chassis were produced. As of now, only 14 remain. One was destroyed in a fire in Pennsylvania.
Yes, fire can repel bugs because the heat and smoke produced by the fire can deter insects from coming near the flames.
To start fire with sticks, the sticks need to be very dry. Fire will be started by rubbing the sticks continuously together. Fire will be produced as a result of friction.
no, but if incomplete combustion takes place then smoke is produced.
fire and the sun
It might have been where fire was discovered.