When particles (AURA) of our Sun collide with particles (AURA) of our Earth we associate this as heat and light not fire.
When particles of Earth collide we call this heat, light, fire.
Fire, as we see it, is the collision of many small particles.
A reaction causing an atomic reaction that causes a gas (oxygen) to enter into reverse evolution where expedient cell division takes place in which each new cell is smaller than the last.
The phenomenon fire is the collision of these chaotic particles.
These minute organisms (heat, light, fire) are a size to interact with the Earths force centrifugal and join the universe with their nucleus intellect as expanding dark matter.
Bruce Voigt Science
Gord_in_Toronto -- First off I apologise for not having the patience and will, to the best of my ability, try and sort out for you the fiction of your advanced education.
Particularly at this time of year and gazing into the fire place you may wonder what it is that causes fire to rise and dance, Oh for **** sake turn your bloody TV on and watch fire place. "Patience Bruce" OK, so you have seen the astronauts experiment with fire and with out the interaction of forces excreting from Earth the fire in space is (like the Sun) just a ball of light.
Experiment 605
One BB sized ball bearing
One bread and butter knife
One magnet
Attach bearing to either pole of the magnet
Attach bearing and magnet to center of knife
Make a few bets to what the bearing stays or attaches to when pulled apart
With the bearing hanging on the knife, place the knife on the likes of a bowl.
Undisturbed the bearing stays with the knife indefinitely
My experiment 605 is a very important scientific discovery
Can you think of a way that the above technology could be used to warrant it being an important scientific discovery?
"Let me help with this," if you take the technology of the electromagnetic crane in the scrap metal yard and apply this technology to produce a hand held on off magnet you can then take this all to outer space enabling a quick and easy way to assemble things.
Bruce Voigt Science