This process is called cellular respiration and is an oxidation.
Burning is a chemical process. The ability to burn, flammability, is a chemical property.
Yes, burning is a chemical process.
Burning is a chemical process.
Burning is a chemical process !
"Cinderless" means something that does not produce cinders or residue. It can refer to a clean-burning material or process that does not leave behind ash or soot.
Something Burning was created in 1996.
It should, unless something went wrong in the burning process.
combustion is the process of burning something. It adds a lot more carbon to the air.
Burning the Process was created on 2001-10-02.
Burning is a process, not a property. Specifically it is the process of rapid oxidation.
burning process does not occur due to absence of air.
No. By burning something you are breaking it down and forming new products (smoke, carbon dioxide, etc), and these are different from the original compound. In contrast, when you melt something, some of it is actually vaporized at the same time, and that is what you are smelling. So when you melt it, you smell the molecules of the original compound, whereas when you burn it, you are smelling the compounds that were formed during the burning process. That said, when burning something, you will probably also smell some of the original compound, because usually when something is burning, some of it is also vaporized and not all of it is burned.
melting and burning
No, burning sugar is exothermic.
Blue Oyster Cult, "Burning For You".
Burning is a chemical process. The ability to burn, flammability, is a chemical property.
Something burning is generally stronger than the scent of a candle.