The law of conservation of matter is applied to processes not to a compound.
Sure, total energy is always conserved.
Yes, because the equation is balanced
Yes, everything obey the conservation of energy laws.
Hydrogen does not obey the octet rule. Boron does not always obey the octet rule and in fact forms Lewis acids such as BF3 which only has 6 electrons.
No, all five types of anti-matter obey chronological progression.
All chemical reactions obey the law of conservation of matter.
Yes, the reaction of sodium and chlorine obeys the law of conservation of matter. This law states that matter is neither created nor destroyed in a chemical reaction. In the reaction between sodium and chlorine, sodium atoms combine with chlorine atoms to form sodium chloride. The total number of atoms before and after the reaction remains the same, demonstrating the conservation of matter.
It's either obey the law of conservation of mass, causing new matter to be created or it is an execption to the law of conservation of mass.
All changes, other than some nuclear reactions, must obey the Law of Conservation of Mass. Chemical reactions, physical changes, heating, cooling, and phase changes must obey the Law of Conservation of Mass.
Sure, total energy is always conserved.
Yes
the chemical equation for photosynthesis and cellular respiration obey the law of conservation is given below.the chemical equation for photosynthesis is :6CO2 + 6H2O ==> C6H12O6 + 6O2.The number of atoms are same on both sides even after the reaction.Hence, obey the law of conservationthe chemical equation for cellular respiration is :C6H12O6(s) + 6O2(g) → 6CO2(g) + 6H2O(l) + Energy (as ATP) .The number of atoms are same on both sides even after the reaction.Hence, obey the law of conservation.
yes because all matter has particles
Yes, because the equation is balanced
Yes, everything obey the conservation of energy laws.
Hydrogen does not obey the octet rule. Boron does not always obey the octet rule and in fact forms Lewis acids such as BF3 which only has 6 electrons.
No, all five types of anti-matter obey chronological progression.