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Physics question: What is the hottest part of the fire? You can tell a lot about the heat of a fire by the color. The areas that are white or blue are much hotter then the areas that are more yellow or ... You can tell a lot about the heat of a fire by the color. The areas that are white or ... What is the hottest fire ever?
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wiki.answers.com/Q/What_is_the_hottest_part_of_the_fire
wiki.answers.com/Q/What_is_the_hottest_part_of_the_fire
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Fire - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Fire is the rapid oxidation of a combustible material releasing heat, light, and various reaction products such as carbon dioxide and water. If hot enough, the gases may become ionized to produce pla...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire
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Fire-eater at the Shigmo festival in Madkai Romtamell, India. ... The concept of color temperature has permeated our everyday language. For example, we use the term "red hot" to qualify everything from a fashion trend, to a spicy food, to a temperature hot enough to melt iron.
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www.webexhibits.org/causesofcolor/3B.html
www.webexhibits.org/causesofcolor/3B.html
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ChaCha has the answer to this question: What color is the hottest fire Answer: The hottest color of a fire is blue. The least hot part of a fire i.
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www.chacha.com/question/what-color-is-the-hottest-fire
www.chacha.com/question/what-color-is-the-hottest-fire
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I know stars are ordered by color according to the Hertzprung-Russell Diagram, blue, white, yellow, orange and the coldest and dimmest stars are red. I guess my main question is, does a flame have an order of color like stars and going from hottest to coolest, what is it?
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www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasci/gen01/gen01323.htm
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Color turns out to depend on the wavelength of the light emitted by an object. Light, ... (If there's lots of soot in the fire, the soot particles will act as blackbody particles, so you will get more red light that way.) If we put magnesium in our fireplaces, we'd see bluer light because of its atomic properties (and get...
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www.madsci.org/posts/archives/mar2001/984443967.As.r.ht...
www.madsci.org/posts/archives/mar2001/984443967.As.r.html
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Re: why do we view red as the hottest color but hottest stars are blue; Date: Mon Mar 12 16:29:00 2001; Posted By: Steve Furlanetto, Grad student, Astronomy, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics; Area of science: Astronomy; ... (If there's lots of soot in the fire, the soot particles will act as blackbody particles,
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www.msu.edu/~elliot48/madsci/what_is/body/colors/stars....
www.msu.edu/~elliot48/madsci/what_is/body/colors/stars.htm
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Typically, fire comes from a chemical reaction between oxygen in the atmosphere and some sort of fuel (wood or gasoline, ... Flame color varies depending on what you're burning and how hot it is. Color variation within in a flame is caused by uneven temperature. Typically, the hottest part of a flame -- the base --
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science.howstuffworks.com/fire1.htm
science.howstuffworks.com/fire1.htm
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Which color flame is hottest - red, yellow or blue? It is a great question, ... Now, which part of this flame is the hottest? Lets see if we can use a wooden toothpick to find out. Hold one toothpick and put the end of it into the blue area at the base of the flame. Notice how long it takes for it to catch fire.
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nicholasacademy.com/scienceexperiment314hottestflame.ht...
nicholasacademy.com/scienceexperiment314hottestflame.html
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