Fire Burning was created in 2008.
Keep the Fire Burning was created on 1994-01-01.
A continuously burning fire is a fire that has a fuel source that allows it to keep burning without extinguishing. This can be achieved through a consistent supply of oxygen and fuel to the fire. Maintaining a continuously burning fire requires careful management and monitoring to prevent it from spreading uncontrollably.
Nitrogen would extinguish the flame. Unlike most burning fuels, magnesium will continue to burn in carbon dioxide because its flame is hot enough to decompose carbon dioxide to carbon and oxygen.
Burning is a chemical change.
When a fire runs out of things to burn, or runs out of fuel(oxygen) it will stop burning.
Fire needs oxygen to continue burning. Water cuts of the supply of oxygen and hence the fire stops.
All fire needs to continue burning is oxygen and fuel
A campfire is kept going by burning fuel such as wood, charcoal, or propane. The heat generated from the burning fuel then sustains the combustion process and allows the fire to continue burning.
Oxygen is required in order for a fire to continue burning. Without oxygen a flame will extinquish itself.
If there is no oxygen, a burning candle will not be able to sustain the combustion process since oxygen is needed for the flame to continue burning. The candle will eventually go out in the absence of oxygen.
Fire Burning was created in 2008.
The minimum amount of oxygen needed to sustain a fire in the atmosphere is about 16% oxygen. Below this level, the fire would not have enough oxygen to continue burning.
the air
Carbon dioxide displaces oxygen, without the oxygen most fires cannot continue burning.
it is a short fire.. not burning for long ^ Best answer I've seen for this question. I had suspected that the "burning" was a metaphor for something else, but this explanation makes more sense than any explanation of the metaphor I've seen.
About a Burning Fire was created on 2004-02-24.