Fire looks simple, but Richard Feynman never lets you get away with “it just burns”.
In this Fun to Imagine: Fire segment, he breaks a flame down into atoms, collisions and stored sunlight, turning an everyday fireplace into a full lesson on energy, chemistry and how trees quietly borrow power from the sun.
This 4K remastered clip of Richard Feynman – Fun to Imagine: Fire is ideal for lessons on energy, reactions, photosynthesis, or just getting students to see a campfire as more than “hot orange stuff”.
Richard Feynman Explains Fire As Atoms Snapping Together
In Richard Feynman – Fun to Imagine: Fire, Feynman starts with atoms that “like” each other at different degrees.
Oxygen atoms in the air would quite like to be next to carbon atoms in the wood, but most of the time they are just drifting past. They only react if they get close enough with enough speed.
Feynman uses a simple mental model: imagine a ball rolling over a landscape with a deep volcanic hole. If it does not have enough speed, it rolls up the slope a little, then back down again and never falls into the hole. Give it more speed and eventually it tips over the edge and drops in.
Fire is the same idea at the atomic level:
Once some oxygen atoms hit carbon hard enough, they “snap in”, forming carbon dioxide and releasing energy. That energy appears as jiggling motion of nearby atoms, making them move faster and collide harder in turn.
Richard Feynman On Why Fire Keeps Going
The clever bit in Fun to Imagine: Fire is how Feynman shows that a flame is self-sustaining once it starts.
Those first successful collisions release heat. The heat makes more atoms move faster, which lets more oxygen snap into more carbon, which releases more heat, and so on. You get:
In his words, this chain of “jiggling” and snapping in one after another is the catastrophe we call fire. The energy is not being created from nothing, it is simply being released from a more tightly bound arrangement of atoms as carbon and oxygen lock together.
Where Does The Energy In Fire Come From?
Students often accept that fire is “energy”, but Richard Feynman – Fun to Imagine: Fire pushes them to ask where that energy was hiding before the match was struck.
The key idea:
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The wood in the fireplace is made by a tree
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The tree pulls carbon dioxide out of the air and water from the ground
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Carbon and oxygen in carbon dioxide are stuck together very tightly
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Somehow, the tree manages to separate them and keep the carbon for itself
If carbon and oxygen “prefer” to be together, splitting them apart must cost energy. Feynman answers the obvious question: how can a tree do that?
The answer is sunlight.
Sunlight hits the leaves and provides the exact energy needed to knock oxygen away from carbon inside carbon dioxide. The tree keeps the rearranged carbon, water and other atoms to build wood, and dumps the spare oxygen back into the air as a by-product.
So every piece of wood is a record of work done by the sun in the past. The structure of the wood is a complicated configuration of atoms that only exists because solar energy has been spent to separate and rearrange them.
Fire As Stored Sunlight Being Released
Once you have that picture, Richard Feynman – Fun to Imagine: Fire becomes a simple energy story:
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Sunlight provides energy to the tree.
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The tree uses that energy to separate carbon and oxygen and build wood.
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When you burn the wood, carbon and oxygen recombine into carbon dioxide.
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The energy you see as light and heat from the fire is the same sunlight being paid back.
In other words, a burning log is stored sunlight being released. The dancing flame, the glow of hot embers and the warm air rising are the visible signs of atoms dropping back to a more comfortable arrangement and giving up the energy they absorbed earlier.
When students realise that, a fireplace stops being just “cosy” and becomes a very clear example of energy being stored, transferred and transformed.
Using This Richard Feynman Fire Clip In The Classroom
This Fun to Imagine: Fire extract is short, tightly focused and perfect for class discussion. A few quick ideas:
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Starter question:
Ask students “What is fire, really?” before playing the clip. Collect their answers, then revisit them afterwards.
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Energy pathways:
Get them to sketch an energy diagram: sunlight → tree (photosynthesis) → chemical energy in wood → thermal and light energy in the flame.
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Activation energy demo:
Compare a cold log that does not burn to a small piece of paper or kindling that catches easily. Discuss Feynman’s “over the hill” analogy as a way of talking about activation energy.
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Atoms and bonds:
Link Feynman’s story to bond energies and exothermic reactions: forming carbon dioxide releases energy because the new bonds are lower in energy than the original arrangement.
Because Richard Feynman keeps the language simple and uses clear analogies, this segment works across a range of ages, from lower secondary pupils just meeting energy and reactions, through to older students who can connect it to enthalpy, bond energies and photosynthesis.
Why This Richard Feynman Episode Still Matters
The Richard Feynman – Fun to Imagine: Fire segment shows exactly why Feynman still works brilliantly in modern classrooms:
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He treats everyday phenomena as serious physics and chemistry.
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He refuses fuzzy answers like “fire is energy”, and instead drills down to atoms, forces and motion.
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He links chemistry (reactions), physics (energy and motion) and biology (photosynthesis) using a single familiar object: a log in a fireplace.
For students, it is a reminder that what looks ordinary is often hiding a deep story about the universe. For teachers, it is a neat way to connect topics that are often taught in separate chapters of the textbook.
Once you have seen fire as trapped sunlight being released while atoms snap together, it is very hard to unsee it.
Episode Discussion
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