We are pretty lucky that most fires burn within our visible light spectrum, but there was this one time at NASA. Apparently, hydrogen is very pale when it burns and can't be seen by most people, not only that, but it burns very cleanly and with little ambient heat. The scientists had to walk around with brooms in front of them, and if the broom caught fire they'd know where the fire was, they called this The Broom Method.

https://shop.minimuseum.com/blogs/cool-things/the-broom-method?srsltid=AfmBOordQRxmUUxMvh3jV2XN7K7vUapiG87WCIQ5a_35TTj99CH5v0gy

The Broom Method

A NASA worker demonstrating the broom method of detecting a hydrogen flame, which are invisible during the day. (Source: NASA) In order to fuel its rockets, NASA scientists must take two of the most basic elements, hydrogen and oxygen, and cool them down hundreds of degrees into their liquid states. In this more efficient form, a rocket’s tank volume can be maximized, providing the needed fuel to achieve lift. This process is a potentially dangerous one, as hydrogen is highly combustible. If at any point during storage, fueling, or flight the liquid form evaporates back into gas, a leak could mean a massive explosion. NASA has had a long history of contending with this issue. Hydrogen leaks were a persistent thorn in the side of the Space Shuttle program, grounding the entire fleet for six months while engineers searched for an elusive leak during the “Summer of Hydrogen”. Because of its efficiency as a fuel source, hydrogen continues to be used by many space agencies, as opposed to other alternatives. The Endeavour orbiter returning from space after STS-118. This mission was the first to deploy hydrogen tape, which luckily caught a leak before takeoff. (Source: NASA) In spite of the dangers of hydrogen, NASA lacked a comprehensive system for detecting a leak for much of its career. Part of hydrogen's danger is that it gives off low radiant heat, meaning its flame is invisible in daylight. NASA came up with a rather creative solution for the issue. During the Apollo missions, scientists and engineers would simply walk through the facilities with a long broom held out in front of them. When the broom touched the invisible burning hydrogen, the end would suddenly combust and they could mark another area which had dangerous gas within it. It was low-tech — but it worked. During the Space Shuttle years, NASA made use of more complex sensors to detect leaks and ultraviolet cameras to spot flames already burning. These measures, while more effective than just waving a broom around, still did not provide an immediate visual indicator of a leak to those on the ground. The agency needed a new technology to spot leaks, one that could be precise and immediate. Commercial hydrogen tape being used to detect a leak, one of many technologies developed by NASA and now available to the public. (Source: ASI Magazine) Working in conjunction with the Florida Solar Energy Center, and making use of a preexisting Japanese patent, scientists at NASA developed a chemochromic tape that changes color in the presence of hydrogen. Hydrogen reacts with the compounds suspended in the outer layer of the tape, indicating a leak. It was first used in 2007 during an Endeavour shuttle flight and has since found a variety of industrial uses in the private sector. Hydrogen leaks continue to be a concern. The second attempted launch of the recent Artemis 1 mission was aborted when a persistent leak could not be shut off. Although systems for detection and management have advanced, NASA faces the same dilemma it did during the Apollo days: the most efficient fuel is also the most dangerous and the easiest to leak. As NASA and the other space agencies ready more missions in the coming years, special attention will have to be paid to this old problem. In this case, it really is rocket science. Want to learn more about NASA's space shuttles? Head over to the shop where you can purchase specimens from the program. Read More! Klebanoff L. Hydrogen Storage Technology: Materials and Applications. CRC Press; 2012. doi:10.1201/b13685

Mini Museum

@RickiTarr

Similar method for detecting high pressure steam leaks in power plants. Super critical steam is nasty stuff.

@RickiTarr

Unfun fact: racing cars used methanol, which also burns invisibly. The results are... Terrifying.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1981_Indianapolis_500#Mears_pit_fire

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3pEoJ5OK3hE

1981 Indianapolis 500 - Wikipedia

@ParadeGrotesque @RickiTarr

both methanol and hydrogen flames don't make soot, so they're hard to see in broad daylight (soot is what makes the yellow part of an illuminating flame).

You can see a hydrogen or methanol flame in the shade or indoors fairly easily. Blue. Kind of like the flame on a gas stove, but going more towards violet than blue. A candle flame they ain’t

Also I can assure you that hydrogen flames give off quite a bit of heat. Been there done that, no scientists were harmed during the making of this statement.

@glasspusher @ParadeGrotesque @RickiTarr Only time it’s easy to see the hydrogen flame is during cold, damp conditions, when the flame creates eddies in the mist/fog, or causes condensation.

Damn tiny H atoms just turn metal pipes into powder.

@RickiTarr hydrogen flames are used in glass blowing, I can attest that it is very pale and you could easily miss it in a well-lit area.

that said I don't think the ambient heat bits true, when I've set off hydrogen oxygen fireballs you could definitely feel the heat and it is used in glass blowing so it has to be hot enough to melt glass with just a tiny pin prick of flame

@RickiTarr that said the reason it's used, is if you're a way better glass blower than I ever was, and you want to attach things without melting the glass around them you can use a tiny tiny pin prick of hydrogen flame and not heat up the surrounding glass
@RickiTarr We learned that in school, bc back in those days we had town gas, which burned almost invisibly in a bunsen burner if you gave it enough air – hence the rule to always turn the bunsen back to a yellow flame when not minding it.
@RickiTarr Does this also work for wicked witches‽

@RickiTarr

*new fear unlocked*

file with quicksand and the bermuda triangle.

@amiserabilist @RickiTarr

"Imagine you are stuck in quicksand. You can either use your broom to get yourself out, or you can use it to detect the hydrogen fire nearby. What do you do?

(You can't use your smartphone to call for help because there is no reception in the bermuda triangle, duh.)"

@amiserabilist @RickiTarr

This is why I ride brooms not horses.

@wakame @RickiTarr

You're a Witch Danger mouse!

i was in the pub alone and there were some aggressive people. they called me danger mouth. i am fine.

@RickiTarr interesting! I'll be engineering a project to build a hydrogen burner at the first of the new year.
@GrayWolf57 Keep brooms on hand lol
@RickiTarr we'll be firing into a simulated kiln and media (most likely salt).
@RickiTarr I never thought about a fire burning outside of the visible spectrum, that's terrifying!

@RickiTarr

Not volunteering g to be on that detail.

Hard nope.

@RickiTarr apparently working with superheated water vapor has the same issue. If there's a leak in a pipe, it's invisible, but you do not want to stick a hand in there. I once spoke to a guy who had worked with it, and he said standard procedure was to stick a wrench into possibly dangerous regions and see if moisture formed on it.
@RickiTarr Super interesting! Thank you for sharing.

@RickiTarr

Yikes!

Like blowing in a roasted marshmallow before eating, because you can't always see the flame.

No, Don't ask me how I know.

@RickiTarr this is depicted in the Fly Me To The Moon opening scenes 😄

https://youtu.be/WrdTpWnSVDE?si=6HcMXzdKWGcWNHN_

Fly Me To The Moon (2024) | “We Need A New Broom.” Cole Davis Fire Test Scene

Fly Me To The Moon (2024)Synopsis: Sparks fly between a marketing executive Kelly Jones (Scarlet Johansson) and a NASA official Cole Davis (Channing Tatum) a...

YouTube
@RickiTarr Formula 1 pit crews have to be careful of invisible fires too. (Or maybe it was NASCAR?)

@gellenburg @RickiTarr
That would be Methanol I think.
Not used in F1 recently.
No idea what NASCAR burn.

The broom method has long been used to detect superheated steam leaks.

@midgephoto @RickiTarr I used to work for a power company.

I was at a plant tour once of one of our nuclear power plants and we were in the steam tunnel that went from the reactor to the turbine and our guide had a long broom stick that affixed to it was a piece of plywood mounted perpendicular to the pipes and as we walked through the tunnel he had this "contraption" held out in front of him.

We were told it was for the very low likelihood there was a microscopic leak in one of the steam pipes. That the escaping steam (several hundred-hundred degrees of super-heated steam) would act as a laser and basically slice us in half if we were at the wrong place at the wrong time.

Not sure how true what he told us was or if they were just fucking with us but it sounded plausible enough and made perfect sense to all of us in the group.

Suffice it to say I wanted to get the fuck out of there. (Not to mention that the heat ... it was SWELTERING in that tunnel!)
@gellenburg @RickiTarr
Ships engine room staple, I gather.
@midgephoto @RickiTarr Every regulation and a lot of procedures are written in blood they say. I'm glad I didn't ask for the details of what started that "procedure" at that plant. (Or maybe whatever "incident" happened happened at another plant and at another company and everyone just adopted the procedure. Power companies do that. They all talk and share best practices and procedures amongst themselves.)
@RickiTarr they need an awful lot of brooms, then
@RickiTarr Somehow this is a metaphor for my life.
@RickiTarr Things I never thought of before, part 234 😱
@RickiTarr ❌ not knowing where the fire is
❌❌❌❌❌❌❌ not knowing *that* the fire is
@RickiTarr Also seen in the Gambit-meets-the-Black-Widow movie.
@RickiTarr Future history: One of the reasons the Artemis project failed was that its budget was impacted by President Trump's tariffs on China, and America imported brooms from China. In a rarely equaled case of "rubbing salt into the wound" when taikonaut Liu Gofeng set foot on the Moon in July 2029 he planted the Chinese flag on the Luna surface, mounted on a broomstick.
@RickiTarr
I learned about this in (of all places) the rom-com Fly Me to the Moon!

@RickiTarr

Sounds like something a witch would do.

Witches still ride brooms, right?

Or, is that restricted to Halloween?

@RickiTarr Apocryphally also used for high-pressure steam leaks which you can hear, but which aren’t visible until the steam cools and condenses quite far away from the actual danger area

@RickiTarr

I've actually encountered this. Was using some oddball accelerant as starter fluid for a biochar project, & got sloppy, it sloshed, & was merrily burning off the open mouth of the can—entirely invisibly. Discovered it by scorching my hand.

Fun times!

@RickiTarr I used to work in the lab that handled hydrogen fire sensors. Very strict protocols in place.