The … physics of that are like… there is a theoretical point, somewhere inside the lava loaf, that is 4000F, but the vast, vast majority of the rest of it is like… between 2000F to 1000F, roughly, right?
… I’m tempted to try and find some kind of material physics simulator, but something tells me they’re gonna be geared toward metals, ceramics and maybe plastics… not… bread dough…
… wha… what temperature would the inside of that bread loaf have to be, to actually be emmitting light?
Like… ~1000 degrees Farenheit?
That bread would be toast before it hit 500 degrees Fahrenheit
I mean, the outside layers are already burned to a carbonized black crisp.
I think that qualifies as toast.
Looking at the blackbody radiation temperature color relationship from Wikipedia, I’d say the color roughly corresponds to 2500K ~ 2300°C ~ 4000°F
The red outside would have to be at least ~800K ~ 500°C ~ 1000°F
The … physics of that are like… there is a theoretical point, somewhere inside the lava loaf, that is 4000F, but the vast, vast majority of the rest of it is like… between 2000F to 1000F, roughly, right?
… I’m tempted to try and find some kind of material physics simulator, but something tells me they’re gonna be geared toward metals, ceramics and maybe plastics… not… bread dough…