Quizzes & Puzzles2 mins ago
a flash when heated
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There just seems to be a suspicious amount of relevant detal - galvenised metal - green flash - green smoke - white powder?
Well lets see you've shorted out a car battery which will cause a large electrical current to flow - it sparks because as you connect it there is a point where the gap is so small that the electricity jumps the gap. creating a lot of heat
As for the colours and the powder the key point is that galvenised metal is coated in zinc.
Have a look here http://www.scorecard.org/chemical-profiles/html/zinc.html especially the bit about burning in air and see if that helps
especially the bit
ps be very careful if this is not a homework question and you r messing around, a car battery can source a lot of current all in one go and all that goes into heat as jake-the-peg said. you be dealing with 0.5-1 KW of power so TTRRYY not to cause a fire or burn your self the good news is 12 Volts will do you no harm.
pps a welding machine is pecisely what you did: a short circuit but a controlled one the high resistence at the joining point causes all the heat that does the welding the bad news is don't improvise with the car battery as it is you may have done some damage to it (assuming you realy were fooling around and not quoting a school book example)
any how god luck either way
Don't breathe in the smoke or you can get "Zinc flu", a condition some welders experience after welding galvanised plate. It feels just like influenza, hence the name.
And don't mess about with car batteries etc. They can be surprisingly powerful and cause serious burns.