The answer depends on hotter than WHAT!
Yes, From what i know Red Flames are 1800F...Orange is 2200F... and White is 2700F. I'm Trying to Find out how much it Need for a Pure Blue Fire
10000000000000 much
Assuming we're not throwing ions into the flame and the color is due strictly to temperature, the blue flame is hotter.The problem is that flames can be different colors for reasons other than temperature. Specifically, they may contain ionized materials with strong emission lines that color the flame. Probably the easiest example to observe using ordinary household materials is sodium which gives an orangish yellow color (easily seen by dropping a few crystals of table salt into the flame of a gas stove).The reason that hotter flames are blue is that blue light is more energetic than red light. A hotter flame has more energy, and therefore generates more energetic light.
The more air the fiercer the flame and the hotter the flame.
About 80 degrees Kelvin during both of their days. Which is about 80 degrees Celsius and 667 degrees hotter in Fahrenheit.
John stamos
50 is much hotter in Celsius than Fahrenheit.
The two types of flames a Bunsen burner can produce are a luminous, yellow flame and a "roaring" blue flame. The blue flame is much hotter than the yellow flame.
The more air the fiercer the flame and the hotter the flame.
No. 32 Celsius is much hotter; about 89.6 degrees Fahrenheit.
The two types of flames a Bunsen burner can produce are a luminous, yellow flame and a "roaring" blue flame. The blue flame is much hotter than the yellow flame.
The much hotter planet is Saturn. Saturn's average surface temperature is about 40 degrees Celsius above that of Neptune.