20 Things You Didn't Know About... Fire
Fire makes water. Fire is a tree running in reverse. Fire is not a thing at all
By Leeaundra Keany
1 Fire is an event, not a thing. Heating wood or other fuel releases volatile vapors that can rapidly combust with oxygen in the air; the resulting incandescent bloom of gas further heats the fuel, releasing more vapors and perpetuating the cycle.
2 Most of the fuels we use derive
their energy from trapped solar rays. In photosynthesis, sunlight and heat make
chemical energy (in the form of wood or fossil fuel); fire uses chemical energy to produce light and heat.
3 So a bonfire is basically a
tree running in reverse.
4 Assuming stable fuel, heat, and
oxygen levels, a typical house fire will double in size every minute.
5 Earth is the only known planet
where fire can burn. Everywhere else: Not enough oxygen.
6 Conversely, the more oxygen,
the hotter the fire. Air is
21 percent oxygen; combine pure oxygen with acetylene,
a chemical relative of methane, and you get an oxyacetylene welding torch that
burns at over 5,500 degrees Fahrenheit—the hottest fire you are likely to
encounter.
7 Oxygen supply influences the
color of the flame. A low-oxygen fire contains lots of uncombusted fuel
particles and will give off a yellow glow. A high-oxygen fire burns blue.
8 So candle flames are blue at
the bottom because that’s where they take up fresh air, and yellow at the top
because the rising fumes from below partly suffocate the upper part of the
flame.
9 Fire makes water? It’s true.
Place a cold spoon over a candle and you will observe the water vapor condense
on the metal...
10 ...because wax—like most organic
materials, including wood and gasoline—contains hydrogen, which bonds with
oxygen to make H2O when it burns. Water comes out your car’s tailpipe, too.
11 We’ve been at this a long
time: Charred bones and wood ash indicate that early hominids were tending
the first intentional fires more than 400,000 years ago.
12 Nature’s been at it awhile,
too. A coal seam about 140 miles north of Sydney, Australia, has been burning
by some estimates for 500,000 years.
13 The ancient Greeks started
fire with concentrated sunlight. A parabolic mirror that focuses solar rays is
still used to ignite the Olympic torch.
14 Every 52 years, when their
calendar completed a cycle, the Aztecs would extinguish every flame in the empire. The
high priest would start a new fire on the ripped-open chest of a sacrificial
victim. Fires fed from this flame would be distributed throughout the land.
15 Good burn: The 1666 Great Fire
of London destroyed 80 percent of the city but also ended an outbreak of
bubonic plague that had killed more than 65,000 people the previous year. The
fire fried the rats and fleas that carried Yersinia pestis, the
plague-causing bacterium.
16 The Peshtigo Fire in
Wisconsin was the second deadliest blaze in United States
history, taking 1,200 lives—four times as many as the Great Chicago Fire. Both
conflagrations broke out on the same day: October 8, 1871.
17 America’s deadliest fire took
place April 27, 1865, aboard the steamship Sultana. Among other passengers
were 1,500 recently released Union prisoners traveling home up the Mississippi
when the boilers exploded. The ship was six times over capacity, which helps
explain the death toll of 1,547.
18 The Black Dragon Fire of 1987,
the largest wildfire in modern times, burned some 20 million acres across China
and the Soviet Union, an area about the size of South Carolina.
19 Spontaneous combustion is
real. Some fuel sources can generate their own heat—by rotting, for instance.
Pistachios have so much natural oil and are so prone to heat-generating fat
decomposition that the International Maritime Dangerous Goods Code regards them
as dangerous.
20 Haystacks,
compost heaps, and even piles of old newspapers and magazines can also burst
into flame. A good reason to recycle DISCOVER when you are done.
Source: discovermagazine
Source: discovermagazine
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