Fire is not considered matter because it is a form of energy rather than a substance with mass and volume. It is a result of a chemical reaction between a fuel and oxygen, and does not have a fixed shape or size like matter does.
Fire is not considered matter in the traditional sense, as it is a form of energy rather than a physical substance.
Yes, fire does have matter. Fire is a chemical reaction that releases energy in the form of heat and light. The matter involved in a fire includes the fuel being burned and the oxygen in the air that reacts with the fuel to produce the flames.
Yes, fire is made of matter. It is a chemical reaction that releases heat and light energy.
Anything that has mass and takes up space is considered matter.
Fire is not a state of matter as the examples you gave. Fire is a reaction. It consumes matter, changing the solid to it's components of ash(solid), water vapor(gas), and heat.
Fire is not considered matter in the traditional sense, as it is a form of energy rather than a physical substance.
Fire is not considered matter because it is a product of a chemical reaction that releases energy in the form of heat and light. Fire is a process, not a substance, so it does not have mass or take up space like traditional forms of matter.
Fire is not considered matter in the traditional sense as it is a form of energy produced by a chemical reaction. Matter is typically defined as anything that has mass and occupies space, whereas fire is a rapid oxidation process that releases energy in the form of heat and light.
fire is considered something called a plasma
Yes, smoke is the collection of gasses and particles which escape from a material when it undergoes combustion. No fire is a type of liquid and can be found in the deep caverns of mexico. :)
These things were considered by the Ancient Greeks to be the elements which made up (in different proportions) all matter.
Fire is considered non-living because it doesn't have cells, it can't grow or reproduce on its own, and it doesn't have a metabolism. Although fire can consume and transform matter, it doesn't meet the criteria for life.
Anything that has mass is considered matter.
Fire itself is not considered organic because it is a chemical reaction involving heat, fuel, and oxygen. Organic matter, on the other hand, refers to substances that contain carbon atoms bonded to hydrogen atoms. While fire can consume organic materials, it is not an organic substance itself.
The heat and light from fire is energy. The smoke from fire contains particles of water, gases, and the materials being burned that are matter. The flame is made up of gases like vaporized fuel, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, water vapor and other gases. All these are matter - occupying space and have mass.
Yes, fire does have matter. Fire is a chemical reaction that releases energy in the form of heat and light. The matter involved in a fire includes the fuel being burned and the oxygen in the air that reacts with the fuel to produce the flames.
Yes, fire is made of matter. It is a chemical reaction that releases heat and light energy.