Both, but chemical dominates.
physical change because it cant go back
Chemical
It is a chemical change.Physical changes are reversible but a rotting egg cannot be made a fresh egg again. Also, the contents of a rotten egg are different from that of a fresh egg. This is also proof of the change being chemical as new products are formed in chemical change only.
A rotten fruit is a physical change. Physical changes involve a change in size shape or state but the chemical makeup of the material remains the same. In the case of a rotten fruit the physical appearance has changed but the chemical composition of the fruit remains the same. The physical change can be seen in the following ways: The color of the fruit has changed from its original color to a brown or black color. The texture of the fruit has changed from firm to mushy. The smell of the fruit has changed from sweet to sour.Rotten fruit is an example of a physical change because the chemical composition of the fruit remains the same even though the physical appearance has changed.
No, when cabbage roots many chemical reactions takes place.
I think you mean "Is burning a paper a physical change?" Burning a paper is not a physical change. It is a chemical change. Because you can't turn the ashes of the paper into a normal paper again. Examples of physical change: Cutting a paper, sharpening a pencil, writing on a paper... Examples of chemical change: Rotten egg, Rusted steel, molded bread...
When a fruit rots, it's being broken down by microbes into a simpler substance. This change involves the breaking and forming of chemical bonds in the fruit and is irreversible (you can't get a fresh fruit from a rotten one). Also, new substances are made, so it is a chemical change.
yes because it gets rotten so is a chemical change
This is a chemical change.
because its chemical properties are changed
Rottening of wood is a chemical (breakdown) reaction
It is a chemical change.Physical changes are reversible but a rotting egg cannot be made a fresh egg again. Also, the contents of a rotten egg are different from that of a fresh egg. This is also proof of the change being chemical as new products are formed in chemical change only.
A rotten fruit is a physical change. Physical changes involve a change in size shape or state but the chemical makeup of the material remains the same. In the case of a rotten fruit the physical appearance has changed but the chemical composition of the fruit remains the same. The physical change can be seen in the following ways: The color of the fruit has changed from its original color to a brown or black color. The texture of the fruit has changed from firm to mushy. The smell of the fruit has changed from sweet to sour.Rotten fruit is an example of a physical change because the chemical composition of the fruit remains the same even though the physical appearance has changed.
No, when cabbage roots many chemical reactions takes place.
I think you mean "Is burning a paper a physical change?" Burning a paper is not a physical change. It is a chemical change. Because you can't turn the ashes of the paper into a normal paper again. Examples of physical change: Cutting a paper, sharpening a pencil, writing on a paper... Examples of chemical change: Rotten egg, Rusted steel, molded bread...
Yea! Cabbage will rot to liquifaction.
When a fruit rots, it's being broken down by microbes into a simpler substance. This change involves the breaking and forming of chemical bonds in the fruit and is irreversible (you can't get a fresh fruit from a rotten one). Also, new substances are made, so it is a chemical change.
Yes, it is a chemical change. It only takes one experience with a rotten egg to learn that they smell different that fresh eggs. When eggs and food spoil, they undergo a chemical change. The change in odor is a clue to the chemical change Chemical Reactions Chemical Changes are also called Chemical Reactions. Chemical reactions involve combining different substances. The chemical reaction produces a new substance with new and different physical and chemical properties. Matter is never destroyed or created in chemical reactions. The particles of one substance are rearranged to form a new substance. The same number of particles that exist before the reaction exist after the reaction.
Just make a compost of rotten wood like logs or smaller logs and rotten leaves.