i can't find any resources to explain this to me so I come to science to ask for help.
If you have a fire burning at 1,800f then you throw a propane tank at the fire, does the explosion from the propane tank add +f to the 1800f? Or does it make the 1800f last longer?
And if you can point me to something to read about this or explain it to me that would be nice.
I don't know how it works but I think it works like that.
The propane tank will increase the complexity of the situation enough that an alternate path that uses doubles instead of floats will be taken to guarantee numeric stability.
>>7953037
Propane burns at 3,623 °F in the open air.
>>7953267
Materials burn at different temperatures, the temperature of the fire will be directly related to the material undergoing combustion.