First degree is a a thin burn like when you barely touch your finger on a straightener or curling iron. Second degree is a little more serious and you get that when you burn your hand or something on a flame. And third degree are bad burns that you can get all over and you bleed and you have burns all over... my uncle lost his arm in a third degree burn when he was around my age (13) by accidentally touching a low power line that was by the pool.
Rinse it gently under cool water, then put an icepack on it wrapped in a clean washcloth and go to the emergency room.
It depends on the size of the coil and the burn rate.
weight of person * percentage of burn% * 4=
Aha! A sparkler burns top to bottom only because you light the top. If you lit the bottom, it would burn bottom to top. If you lit the middle, it would burn both directions from the middle.
The Airbus A320 burns roughly 2500 pounds per hour, which is about 368 gallons per hour.
Based upon ferry range, the A340-300 (the most common version) burn 9.6 liters of jet fuel per kilometer. That's more than the fuel burn of the Boeing 777-200 (its competitor) that burns only 8.9 liters of jet fuel per hour.
5 liters a day
Yes a second degree burn is painful. They burn damages your nerve cells.
Based on maximum take off weight ( 93,500Kg) Optimum Altitude ISA +15 fuel burn 3200 Kg/H . regards
It sometimes can. Usually it doesn't. A burn that results in a blister is usually second degree.
Second-degree burn
80
For a second degree burn, you will see redness. There will also be blisters forming.
For a second degree burn, you will see redness. There will also be blisters forming.
A second degree burn (as it's most commonly called) is also what is called Partial-thickness burns to EMS personnel.
between 20000 and 37000 liters per hour