0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
fiery hot, cloven hoofed beastie.
I'm pretty sure it will be somewhere between 1000 and 2000 CIf someone gives me a research grant big enough I will measure it.
It is possible to estimate temperature by the colour of the flame...http://www.mediacollege.com/lighting/colour/colour-temperature.html(I'd guess your match is nearer 2000K than 1000K)
Here the temperature of a candle is listed as 1930K ...http://www.atsf.co.uk/ilight/tech/thermal.htmlYou could try photographing a candle and a match together and compare their colours,(I suspect they are very similar).
"Try to melt an iron nail with a candle and then put your results here."What would that actually tell you? Might it tell you more about the efficiency of heatsinks than the temperature of flames?If I get steel wool and put it in a candle flame it burns.
It tells you it's very hard to use melting steel to measure the temperature of a candle flame because, for bits of steel small enough to melt, oxidation happens so quickly the stuff catches fire.Fine copper wire melts easilly enough in a candle flame- that's about 1350KAdding something, like a nail, to the flame will clearly change the properties of the flame.Much better to use something that's already there. Flames are full of hot gases and soot. Fortunately for us the soot is a near perfect black body emitter so we can use the colour temperature as a good measure of the real temperature. A spot of web searching gives a range of values for the colour temperature of a candle from about 1800 to 2000K.A look back at the original question of match heads makes it even clearer that we can't really use melting lumps of metal to measure temperatures. The match head is small and the flare doesn't last very long so there wouldn't be enough heat or time to melt metal well even if the instantaneous temperature were high enough. Also the environment is very chemically reactive so the problem of oxidation wold be even more severe.Measuring the emission spectrum of a match wouldn't be very difficult and matching it ( please forgive the pun) to a black-body emission curve should give a reasonable measure of the temperature.
Common iron (for example a nail) melts at about 1800K; common steels even lower. Try to melt an iron nail with a candle and then put your results here.
Quote from: lightarrow on 26/05/2008 12:34:16Common iron (for example a nail) melts at about 1800K; common steels even lower. Try to melt an iron nail with a candle and then put your results here.In the movie "Escape from Alcatraz" a bundle of matches is used to weld two small bits of metal,a bit like a thermite reaction which can weld (melt) iron.This "Hollywood science" may actually be possible.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermite
I just mentioned thermite as an example of an exothermic reaction of common chemicals which is capable of melting iron.
Quote from: RD on 27/05/2008 16:29:31I just mentioned thermite as an example of an exothermic reaction of common chemicals which is capable of melting iron.And so? You could mention oxygen + hydrogen or oxygen + acetylene, as well (for ex.) or any other similar reaction.
Quote from: lightarrow on 28/05/2008 12:48:21Quote from: RD on 27/05/2008 16:29:31I just mentioned thermite as an example of an exothermic reaction of common chemicals which is capable of melting iron.And so? You could mention oxygen + hydrogen or oxygen + acetylene, as well (for ex.) or any other similar reaction.Just trying to point out the surprisingly large amount of energy which can be released by innocuous everyday household chemicals.The thermite reaction, which is capable of melting iron, uses aluminium and rust. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermite[Don't try this at home]