I'm not an expert, but I think it depends on what you're burning, if it is a gas fire than a lazy yellow flame is the coolest. But if you're burning carbons, (paper, charcoal, etc.) than a greenish flame is the coolest.
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A blue flame typically indicates a cooler temperature compared to other colors like red or yellow. Blue flames often burn fuel more efficiently due to the higher oxygen content, resulting in a more controlled and cooler burn.
The hottest flame is blue (or a shade thereof).
In industrial processes, such as oxy-fuel welding and cutting, the base of the flame tends to be closer to the ultraviolet range. Frequencies in this range and higher are not considered "colored light."
Higher frequency photons (ultraviolet to gamma rays) tend to have more energy, which is the reason ultraviolet light gives you sunburns, while infrared, micro, and radio waves do much less harm.
The hottest flame is a transparent blue/white colour. A darker blue flame usually shows unburnt gas.
The orange-yellow (or even red-black) gas flame is the coolest (350oC), the white-blue flame is much hotter.
The external part of the flame is the coolest.
The hottest flame is the blue flame and the coolest flame is yellow.
The color of the flame depends on the temperature, fuel nature, composition of particles in the flame, oxygen concentration.
The coolest stars are red in color. They are classified as red dwarfs and have surface temperatures ranging from about 2,500 to 3,500 degrees Celsius.
Answer:Color of a flame depends primarily on its temperature. In the visible spectrum, red is the coolest, blue the warmest. The yellow you see in burning wood is from its lower temperature and the incandescence of fine particles in the flame called soot. The soot is formed because of a lack of oxygen during combustion. Natutral Gas burns at a higer temperature and tends to burn more completely in the environments we use it in, so you see a blue flame and little to no soot.