When one thing changes to another, the process is called metamorphosis.
One dictionary definition is, "A marked change in appearance, character, condition, or function."
This can happen with inanimate objects, as well as with biological entities.
A good example is the butterfly.
This is a chemical change! because physical change is a change of matter from one form to another without a change in chemical properties. like mcdonalds
Chemical reactions, normally. However, radioactivity, nuclear fission, or nuclear fusion also fit this definition.
This is a chemical change, also known as a chemical reaction.
This is a chemical change, a chemical reaction.
It turns into a new from that has rotted or has an odder that can smell bad.
the is answer is odder produced.
Chemical Change.
This is a typical chemical reaction.
chemical
chemical
A chemical change is a change in which a substance turns into a completely different substance that can't be reversed. A chemical change often happens when a substance burns (not to be confused with evaporation or melting of a substance), changes colors, a substance spoils or rusts, photosynthesis or respiration, and/or a substance tarnishes.Some examples are a bike rusting, burning bread to make toast, fireworks exploding, milk spoiling, a leaf changing color, mixing eggs and flour for a batter, baking a cake, etc.A chemical change will NOT dissolve, go through a state of matter (sublimation, decomposition, melting, freezing, evaporation, and condensation), breaking or tearing of a substance, and/or anything that can be reversed back.A chemical change is one in which one or more new substances are formed. Simple examples include burning and rusting.
It depends entirely on the substance. 0.2 kilograms of lead take up much less space then 0.2 kilograms of water, and 0.2 kilograms of air takes up much more space! You must know the density of the thing you are measuring to know this answer.Roughly 200g if it is 0.2 liters of water, but different substances will have different masses , and there will be differences for different temperature and pressure.
A pure substance is something that is only composed of one component. So, everything in the periodic table as well as every single molecule can be considered a pure substance. For example, a block of sulfur is a pure substance because it's made entirely out of sulfur. Another example would be a cup of pure acetone because there is only acetone inside the cup. So, salt water is not a pure substance because it's water mixed with salt.
No, it is actually density that affects how much of a liquid is displaced when something is put in it. It is a common misconception that viscosity and density are the same thing, but the fact is, substances of the same density can have entirely different viscosities.
It depends entirely on the size of your thermos. They come in different volumes.
Sodium chloride is it an entirely different substance with its own unique properties.
Chemical Change.
These are called molecules.
No, mixing is a purely physical process. Chemical processes result in the creation of entirely new substances with different properties from the original substances.
Salt on its own is a pure substance. It consists entirely of sodium chloride ions. On the other hand, pepper is not a pure substance. It is a mixture of many different substances.
Chemical reactions, normally. However, radioactivity, nuclear fission, or nuclear fusion also fit this definition.
chemical change
No it is two entirely different substances.
No. They have entirely different chemistry, structure, properties, effects.
Melting point. That depends entirely on the substance. Different things liquefy at different temperatures.
Hydrogen is a pure substance because it is an element
No, glycerin and corn syrup are entirely different substances with different uses in baking.