Funny thing is, I began today knowing I was going to continue to try and work on some flames,
and all day I keep thinking of a post I read once where a person argued that there is no fire in
space due to no oxygen,,,,
well, what is that thing called our Sun?
Some test shots - Clip from battlestar vs Battlestar.
tried a lil bit of film effects, no clue there... but, just wanted to see if any one
may have some input or imput on this.
thnx for taking a gander
RRR
Posts
Uh, the Sun, being a star, shines by the power of hydrogen fusion, a nuclear reaction. No oxygen is involved. "Fire" as it is commonly known is a chemical reaction and definitely DOES require an oxygen atmosphere.
Thank you all for putting in some 2 cents, but I thought this debate has been over for years....
I just added that for entertainment value, though true,
I cannot believe what I have gotten back, it seeems this debate is still in debate LOL
Bottom line is, Yes, there is fire in space. However created, but it does exist...
Thnks and
Regards,,
RRR
oh and on the wind subject, it is a reg emitter and a Tp surface emitter, and the Reg emitter has its own wind,,, so, its not in tune,,
Good eye..
As for fire in space, its like the whole sound in pace debate. It all thrives on technicalities. For example, TECHNICALLY there could be fire in space if there is a supply of oxygen. The only issues are: 1.) the oxygen supply can deplete/expand quite quickly if its some sealed area, etc 2.) there won't be much fire, as it is extreme smoke, which really won''t trail that much. Same applies to explosions, they really won't be as powerful as they are on Earth maybe 1/4th the power I assume. In any event, if the explosion/fire is sustained/combusted by something other than oxygen than it may increase.
EDIT: And explosions probably may be more IMplosions. But to each is there own I guess.
because of the lack of pressure, smoke would dissipate pretty instantly.