flames - meaning and definition. What is flames
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What (who) is flames - definition


Flames (1932 film)         
1932 FILM BY KARL BROWN
Flames is a 1932 American drama film directed by Karl Brown and starring Johnny Mack Brown, George Cooper and Noel Francis.Miller p.
Flame         
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  • Different flame types of a [[Bunsen burner]] depend on oxygen supply. On the left a rich fuel with no premixed oxygen produces a yellow sooty diffusion flame; on the right a lean fully oxygen premixed flame produces no soot and the flame color is produced by molecular radicals, especially CH and C2 [[band emission]].
  • zero-G]], convection does not carry the hot combustion products away from the fuel source, resulting in a spherical flame front.
  • black-body]] emission of [[soot]] particles (as the flame is clearly a blue premixed complete combustion flame) but instead comes from the [[spectral line]] emission of sodium atoms, specifically the very intense sodium D lines.
  • radical]] band emission and [[Swan bands]]. Note that virtually all the light produced is in the blue to green region of the spectrum below about 565 nanometers, accounting for the bluish color of sootless hydrocarbon flames.
VISIBLE, GASEOUS PART OF A FIRE
Flames; Flamed; Fire in space; Gasflame; Gas flame
A flame (from Latin [is the visible, gaseous part of a fire]. It is caused by a highly [[exothermic chemical reaction taking place in a thin zone.
Flamed         
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  • Different flame types of a [[Bunsen burner]] depend on oxygen supply. On the left a rich fuel with no premixed oxygen produces a yellow sooty diffusion flame; on the right a lean fully oxygen premixed flame produces no soot and the flame color is produced by molecular radicals, especially CH and C2 [[band emission]].
  • zero-G]], convection does not carry the hot combustion products away from the fuel source, resulting in a spherical flame front.
  • black-body]] emission of [[soot]] particles (as the flame is clearly a blue premixed complete combustion flame) but instead comes from the [[spectral line]] emission of sodium atoms, specifically the very intense sodium D lines.
  • radical]] band emission and [[Swan bands]]. Note that virtually all the light produced is in the blue to green region of the spectrum below about 565 nanometers, accounting for the bluish color of sootless hydrocarbon flames.
VISIBLE, GASEOUS PART OF A FIRE
Flames; Flamed; Fire in space; Gasflame; Gas flame
·Impf & ·p.p. of Flame.
Examples of use of flames
1. I‘m now seeing flames –– flames, in the center of the building.
2. Flames There are fears the flames could spread to the historic wooden neighbourhoods, causing further damage.
3. "Whoever fans the flames of insurgence, will be burned in the same flames," stressed the minister.
4. We saw the left engine shoot up in flames, red flames.
5. He quickly burst into flames when the fumes from the gas met the flames from the tree.