To make a fire hotter, you can add more fuel, increase the airflow, or use a fire starter like kindling or paper to help it burn more intensely.
To enhance the intensity of a fire and make it burn hotter, you can increase the supply of oxygen, add more fuel, or use a fire accelerant. These actions can help create a more intense and hotter burning fire.
Yes, the only way for that to work is if you have the right amount of oxygen, though. Blue fire can get hotter if it's heated by red fire and sand can be heated by lightning, causing it to turn to glass. Without the the right amount of oxygen, the object being heated will only get as hot as its source. Very rarely does the object get hotter than its source.
The top of a fire is hotter because heat rises. As the flames burn, the heat generated moves upward, creating a convection current that carries the heat towards the top. The sides of the fire receive heat from both the flames and the surrounding air, but they are not directly exposed to the full intensity of the flames, which is why they are not as hot as the top.
Green fire is not indicative of temperature. The color of fire is determined by the chemical composition of the fuel burning, not the temperature. Blue flames tend to be hotter than red or yellow flames.
The blue part of a flame in a fire is significant because it indicates complete combustion of the fuel, resulting in a hotter and more efficient burn.
add fire
To enhance the intensity of a fire and make it burn hotter, you can increase the supply of oxygen, add more fuel, or use a fire accelerant. These actions can help create a more intense and hotter burning fire.
No, salt does not make a fire burn hotter. Salt can actually have the opposite effect as it can help to smother a fire by cutting off the oxygen supply. It is not recommended to use salt to try to increase the intensity of a fire.
Hotter Than Fire was created on 2011-11-02.
No. Adding oxygen to a fire will make it burn faster and hotter. In fact, one of the ways of putting out a fire is to cut off the supply of oxygen.
yep,
yep,
I'd say purple fire
No, the color of a flame is determined by the temperature at which a material burns. Blue flames are typically hotter than orange flames because they burn at a higher temperature.
it can make u hotter if u say that it can make u hotter
Because more oxygen is needed for fuel for fire.
Yes, when you loom at a fire, which color is closest to the fule of the fire is hottest