Question:

Fire or heat absorption?

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Everybody knows that there are breakouts of fire everywhere correct?

And Firefighters can only do so much to help. There basic material to stop fire is water. But the thing they should try to do is invent a fire Absorber. Something that just pulls fire into it. Everybody knows how magnets attract metal in seconds. I think it would be somehow possible to do the same thing with heat or fire. It would stop fires in seconds, more people would live. Not only would it help stop fires in seconds it could contribute to world defense. Ok lets say that two countries got into a war for any reason, and both of them have access to atomic or nuclear bombs, so one day they just decide to bomb each other. Sucks huh? but it could be prevented, lets say the countries are unstoppable so no one can go and stop the bombs. Ok now imagine a big or even small heat absorber, then a nuclear bomb being sent to each country. The heat absorbers ready to work before the nuclear bombs go off, so as they start to go off all that nuclear energy or heat is absorbed or sucked into a certain machine for containment. So now everybody in the world can be safer. The machine would work as a heat seeker and heat capturer. Doesn't that sound like a good idea?

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6 ANSWERS


  1. I wear oven mitts when I throw my fire haduken.  Hope this helps.


  2. The fire service has something very similar to what you're talking about. They use a liquid foam that is basically a bunch of soap bubbles and they put that on the fire to take away the oxygen and smother the fire. Google AFFF

  3. o_o. That sounds like a really cool idea lols. But when it absorbs the fire or heat, what happens to it afterwards? Does it change it's state?


  4. no. that isnt how atomic bombs work. heat is one thing...force is another. shrapnel is another. nuclear energy is quite another.

  5. ...What does this have to do with martial arts? Besides, fire is the side effect of matter changing form in a chemical reaction between oxygen and a fuel source when it has reached it's ignition temperature. The only way to put out a fire is to take away one of those elements. Either bring the fuel down back below it's ignition temperature (water) or taking away or displacing the oxygen it needs to burn (dry chemicals). While it's a good idea, there isn't a way to absorb a side effect of a chemical reaction.

  6. I can't believe nobody thought of this before.

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