fire is not a substnce whose temp. can be measured
2006-10-31 22:43:06
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answer #1
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answered by Chanti® 3
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The thing that changes the temperature of the fire is what is burning. If you think of the fire as the release of whatever is being burnt into the air. As 'things' are made up of different particles/atoms, they are going to be 'released' at different temperatures. (Think of heat as energy, e.g. the more heat there is the more energy given to the particles to allow them to break free and move up into the air)
2016-05-23 01:00:24
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I would think that it depends on the fuel. If you use something like wood, that flame will be significantly less hot than if you used something like a hydrogen jet. I would also guess that the foreign body content in the air (smog, pollen, etc.) would also be a variable contributing to overall heat.
2006-10-31 19:33:53
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answer #3
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answered by Takfam 6
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hello, fire is a chemical reaction with varying temps for the chemicals and environments. im sure there is an exact number, however i didnt get that far. it was a 300 hr after school job and only 100 spent at the cdf training when i wasnt sweeping. also had fire fighting in the us navy, but they didnt cover that, only survival.
2006-10-31 19:33:37
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answer #4
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answered by l8ntpianist 3
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every material in the world has specific temperatures
energy released when it burns and temp of ignition
2006-10-31 20:48:48
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answer #5
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answered by koki83 4
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It depends on what makes that fire
2006-10-31 19:27:54
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answer #6
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answered by sanjay n 1
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hot and very hot google it
2006-10-31 19:30:08
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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