Snipe=UKLF= wrote:
Bertster7 wrote:
I'd imagine it's to do with the blue part of the flame being the hottest part of it. Without gravity the flame would be centered around a smaller point, the heat wouldn't rise because there wouldn't be an up. The same amount of calorific energy would be produced from the flame, in a smaller area, so it would be hotter and therefore blue.
Yeah thats pretty much what i first thought..
But then i started thinking, if theres no up then obviously heat can't rise so would the heat remain in the flame and just get hotter and hotter eventually turning white or something?Bernadictus wrote:
You might have noticed.
Sun?
Exactly.
eh?
Well, it wouldn't stay around the candle, it would get hotter around the candle, but not stay entirely there.
The flame passes on the energy to the air, and in normal gravity, this causes this to rise. In microgravity, I'd imaging that the heat can't move up, as such, but it would still pass on the energy in an area around it, so the energy would still change into other forms except heat, but it wouldn't stay in the same place.
The reason (I may be wrong, this is my mind working here, not fact) a flame is only a certain area is because of this:
When the hot area reaches a certain surface area to mass ratio, the energy isn't enough to keep it at a constant/rising tempereture, so all the air around it would take the energy out of the hot region and pass it on, but it would be at such a small temperatue compared to the source, the oxygen wouldn't ignite anymore, which is (I think) the outer area of the flame.
The blue part of a flame is the hottest, in normal gravity, the air moves due to gravity and the hotter air being "lighter" than the colder air, which causes it to rise and change temperature quickly, as the energy isn't sufficient to keep the region warm at that distance from the source (and the contact area of the surrounding cold air is so large that it takes all the energy out of it) in microgravity, the air doesn't move because of gravity, it moves by transfering the energy from one particle to another (It does this aswell in normal gravity, just at a slower pace). This allows the area of the flame to become very hot (Blue) and the heat doesn't dissapate as quickly, but is smaller, meaning the contact area of the colder air is alot larger, making the flame lose heat from it's outer edges very quickly, so it doesn't get colder slowly enough to change from a blue flame to an orange one...
That's what I think anyway.
I meant this to be a short post, but that's what bloody Physics in school does to you, makes you over think....
Damn....
PS: I probably repeated myself a *lot* in that, and it might not make any sense, but hey, I made it up as I went along, can't blame me for trying =p
PPS: My fingers are tired....
PPPS: (and edit) I didn't read much of the posts above, so I didn't know that the yellow flame was caused by impurities, so most of this is a wee bit off.... That sucks.... I was enjoying feeling smart....
Last edited by ilinear (2006-10-11 12:33:24)