Hmm. I was told by my HS Physics teacher (who incidentally was a PhD who used to teach at University of Moscow--figure that one out) that it was a low temperature plasma. However, he may have been incorrect, or simply dumbing things down for us to understand. We need a P-Chemist to answer this. Maybe JDurg will read this eventually. Anyway, here's the definition of a plasma from the 'net:
an electrically neutral ionized gas in an electric
discharge; distinctly different from solids and liquids
and normal gases
(physical chemistry) the gaseous state of hot ionized
material consisting of ions and electrons and present in
the stars and fusion reactors: sometimes regarded as a
fourth state of matter distinct from normal gasses
Hmm, here's an interesting site:
http://www.straightdope.com/columns/021122.htmlThe strange thing is, a good flame (not this crap you get when a log burns, but like an oxygen-methane torch used for glassblowing) is ionizing. It's got an oxidizing and a reducing part of the flame where electron transfer can occur. Perhaps this article isn't talking about welding type torches. This is quite an interesting phenomenon and definitely warrants further discussion.