Fun To Imagine - Fire

Duration 04:59
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⭐ Interactive Lesson ⭐
Richard Feynman - Fire: Stored Sunlight

Fire: Stored Sunlight

"People look at trees and think they come out of the ground. But if you ask where the substance comes from... trees come out of the air."

The substance of a tree is Carbon. Where does that Carbon come from? It comes from the Carbon Dioxide in the air. The sun shines down and separates the Oxygen from the Carbon, leaving the Carbon in the tree.

The heat and light of a fire? That is the light and heat of the sun that went in years ago. It is stored sun coming out.

[Image of photosynthesis process]
● Sunlight ● CO2 (Air) ● H2O (Water) ● O2 (Oxygen)

(Scientific Note: While trees primarily "breathe" their mass from the air, the soil plays a vital role! Microbes break down organic matter in the ground, releasing Carbon Dioxide back into the atmosphere for the tree to use.)

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The Source

Where does the substance of a tree come from?

(Tap to Reveal)

The Air (Mostly)

Trees "breathe" in Carbon Dioxide. The soil provides water and minerals, and microbes recycle ground carbon back into the air for the tree to use.

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The Barrier

Why doesn't wood just burn instantly?

Activation Energy

Atoms repel each other (the "Hill") until heat pushes them fast enough to snap together.

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The Release

What is fire actually made of?

Stored Sunlight

We are releasing the sun's energy that the tree locked away years ago.

The Hill and The Hole

If Oxygen loves Carbon so much, why doesn't the wood just burn spontaneously? Feynman explains it with an analogy: A ball trying to fall into a deep volcano hole, but blocked by a hill.

The Oxygen (the ball) wants to snap into the Carbon (the hole). But first, it must climb the hill of repulsion. Use the Temperature Slider to give the Oxygen enough speed to overcome the hill.

Cold (Slow) Hot (Fast)

Observation Log:

The Oxygen atom is moving too slowly. It cannot climb the hill.

If you get it hot enough, the Oxygen goes over the top and SNAPS into the Carbon. That snap releases a huge amount of jiggling motion (Heat) and light. That catastrophe is a fire.

[Image of fire triangle]

The Vocabulary of Fire

Find the key terms Feynman uses to describe this process. Find: CARBON, OXYGEN, SUNLIGHT, JIGGLING, ACTIVATION, VOLCANO, TREES, ENERGY.

Word Bank

A Test of Understanding

Let us see if you can follow the path from the sun to the fireplace.

Science Since the 80s: Watching the Snap

Feynman's analogy of the "Hill" was his way of explaining Activation Energy, a concept that was already well-known to chemists in the 1980s. The scientific community knew the theory, but they couldn't see it happening.

The major advancement since this episode aired is the field of Femtochemistry. Using ultra-fast lasers that flash in femtoseconds (that is 0.000000000000001 seconds!), scientists like Ahmed Zewail (Nobel Prize, 1999) were finally able to "film" chemical reactions in slow motion. We can now actually watch atoms as they climb the energy hill, transition over the top, and snap into their new structures, confirming Feynman's vivid mental image with direct observation.