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what is burning and how occured heat and light |
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| Jan25-13, 04:18 PM | #1 |
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what is burning and how occured heat and light
how occur burning namely when something burn... what is the event in atomic size. atom can not burn what is burning and how occured heat and light ...is heat vibration of the atoms ??
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| Jan25-13, 04:22 PM | #2 |
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| Jan25-13, 04:30 PM | #3 |
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| Jan27-13, 01:59 PM | #4 |
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what is burning and how occured heat and light
thanks for your answers...I understand how occur burning...and so how we feel the heat ...is heat atoms of vibration and when this vibration increase and hit us so we feel that like its heat.
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| Jan27-13, 02:43 PM | #5 |
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When you put your hand over a flame you have a couple of things happening. First, the air surrounding the flame is being drawn in, thanks to convection, and heated up from the combustion process itself. This warmer air rises, which fuels the convection process that draws more air in. As the warm air rises it comes into contact with your hand and through collisions between the air molecules and your hand's molecules heat is transferred to your hand, warming it up. Second, the hot air and fuel itself puts out thermal radiation. Thermal radiation is EM radiation that is emitted when any object is at a temperature above 0 kelvin, aka absolute zero. The hotter an object is, the more energy it puts out as radiation and the higher frequency that radiation is. A flame typically puts out a lot of radiation in the infrared range of the spectrum, so when you put your hand over the flame you are also absorbing infrared radiation from the flame in addition to feeling the warm air. This thermal radiation is the reason you feel warm when you sit close to a fire. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_radiation http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiant_heating |
| Jan28-13, 04:00 PM | #6 |
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Yes indeed, combustion is fast oxidation. But there is an important detail: usually there is flame. Flame is more than just a hot gas with quickly moving particles, it is plasma, whose visible and IR emission is due to atomic transitions.
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| Jan28-13, 07:11 PM | #7 |
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See this link: http://www-spof.gsfc.nasa.gov/Education/FAQs7.html#q97 Excerpt: |
| Jan29-13, 10:54 AM | #8 |
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Dear Drakkith,
Thanks for helping me to analyze in more depth the subject. I might have exaggerated the importance of plasma especially in common low-temperature flames, whose light I agree should be mainly due to incandescent aerosol particles formed by incomplete combustion. However, there is no particular threshold for a gas to exhibit plasma behaviour and undoubtedly even a candle flame (T around 1000ºC) contains a small fraction of ions, and a properly conducted experiment will demonstrate it (see e.g. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a7_8G...=youtu.be&hd=1 ; I have seen somewhere also a low-voltage variant, so you can not say that ionization is due to the high field). Anyway, part of the light especially in high temperature flame is due to electronic transitions, occurring not necessarily only in ions, but also in atoms and molecules. |
| Jan29-13, 04:21 PM | #9 |
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| Jan29-13, 04:43 PM | #10 |
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Modern classic: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ymAXKXhvHI
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