magnesium
Potassium has a violet color in the flame test.
aluminium
Candle burns with a yellow flame because its an incomplete combustion. The temperature of the flame also relates to its colour and also the trace metal ions present will influence the flame colour.
A green flame is due probable to copper.
Potassium although sometimes it can look purple
Potassium has a violet color in the flame test.
Magnesium
magnesium
Iron burns with a red-orange flame when exposed to high heat. The color of the flame is due to the specific energy levels of electrons in the iron atoms as they release energy in the form of light when heated.
The element that burns brilliantly in the air is magnesium. Magnesium is an alkaline Earth metal with the atomic number 12.
Magneseum. an Alkali earth metal
Magnesium carbonate does not have a distinctive flame color when it burns on its own. However, when magnesium metal is burned, it produces a bright white flame due to the emission of energy in the form of light.
Sulfur is a non-metal that can burn with a blue flame. When ignited, sulfur reacts with oxygen in the air to produce sulfur dioxide gas, which burns with a characteristic blue flame.
The metal that releases a blue-white light when burned is magnesium. When ignited, magnesium burns with a bright white flame due to the intense heat produced during the combustion process.
Potassium has a violet color in the flame test.
The flame test is for the metal. When a metal is heated in a flame, electrons in the metal atoms become excited and jump to higher energy levels, emitting characteristic colors of light. This helps identify the metal present.
aluminium