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Summary Of: Incandescence

Molten glassy material glows orange with incandescence in a vitrification experiment... Molten glassy material glows orange with incandescence in a vitrification experiment... The incandescence of a theoretically perfectly black object is known as...

Encyclodia Page On: Incandescence

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Molten glassy material glows orange with incandescence in a vitrification experiment. | | vitrification | The incandescent metal embers of the spark used to light this Bunsen burner emit light ranging in color from white to orange to red or to blue. This change correlates with their temperature as they cool in the air. The flame itself is luminescent, not incandescent, as its blue color is due to various other atomic and molecular energy transitions.[dubious  – discuss] | | Bunsen burner | luminescent | blue color | dubious | discuss | light | electromagnetic radiation | black body | electromagnetic spectrum | Planck's law | Stefan–Boltzmann law | Wien's displacement law | incandescent light bulbs | resists | flow of electrons | Fluorescent lamps | thermionic emission | atomic excitation | Incandescent light bulb | List of light sources | | physics | stub | help | Categories | Electromagnetic radiation | Luminescence | Physics stubs | All pages needing cleanup | Articles with disputed statements |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Incandescence".