Its probably between 2,190 °F to 2,370 °F or 1,200 °C to 1,300 °C
Correction. Actually blue fire is the hottest ranging over those temperatures. White as far as stars go is greatly cooler than blue.
No, a blue flame of a Bunsen burner is hotter than a yellow flame. The blue flame indicates complete combustion of the gas, which produces a higher temperature compared to the yellow flame's incomplete combustion.
The dominant color of a nonluminous flame on a Bunsen burner is blue. Whereas, the dominant color of a luminous flame on a Bunsen burner is orange.
The blue flame.
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The hottest flame is the blue flame and the coolest flame is yellow.
The blue flame of a Bunsen burner has a temperature between 500 0C and 700 0C.
The maximal temperature is in the roaring blue flame - up to 700 0C.
No, blue is the hottest color on a Bunsen burner flame. The blue color indicates that the gas is burning efficiently and at a high temperature. Yellow in a Bunsen burner flame suggests incomplete combustion and lower temperatures.
The blue flame of the Bunsen burner is when it is hottest. The yellow flame is the safety flame. you should always start the burner on the safety flame which is produced when the holes on its base are closed.
yes there is a flame at the top of a Bunsen burner. there are three different types light blue blue and yellow
The roaring flame on a Bunsen burner is typically blue in color.
No, a blue flame of a Bunsen burner is hotter than a yellow flame. The blue flame indicates complete combustion of the gas, which produces a higher temperature compared to the yellow flame's incomplete combustion.
The dominant color of a nonluminous flame on a Bunsen burner is blue. Whereas, the dominant color of a luminous flame on a Bunsen burner is orange.
The yellow flame on a Bunsen burner is called a "safety flame" or a "luminous flame." This flame is typically used when a lower temperature is required since it produces less heat than a blue flame.
The clean flame for heating on a Bunsen burner is the blue flame. This flame has a well-defined inner cone and burns with complete combustion, producing a high temperature suitable for heating applications in the laboratory.
Its blue
Bunsen burners are preferred over candles or fires because the Bunsen burner produces a much higher temperature (noted by the blue flame) and it is much easier to contain/control a Bunsen Burner flame.