Quotulatiousness

April 27, 2018

What is fire? | James May Q&A (Ep36) | Head Squeeze

Filed under: Science — Tags: , — Nicholas @ 02:00

BBC Earth Lab
Published on 30 Aug 2013

Discover the scientific nature of fire with James May in this Head squeeze video Q&A.

Fire, pretty essential really and something we often take for granted, but what exactly is it? Well to create fire you need three things – some fuel, a heat source and oxygen. If we remove any one of these, then the fire will go out. When we apply sufficient heat to the fuel for it to reach its ignition point, the material will combust in the presence of oxygen.

Combustion is actually the process by which the fuel decomposes, its molecules breaking down, releasing and recombining with the oxygen to produce water, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide and all sorts of other things.

The flames which we see are composed of incandescent soot, this is not fire, as ethanol for example, can produce fire without visible flames. Incandescence increases with temperature and so we can estimate the heat of the flames moving from red, through orange, to the hottest of all – white heat.

There’s much more to fire than this and James May explains all in this fantastic head squeeze video. If you enjoyed it as much as we did subscribe for more, like, share and give us your thoughts in the lively comments below.

To find out exactly how things burn check out Fran Scott’s Live Experiment: http://youtu.be/PKtfh8aHXQo

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